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Someone To Run With : A Novel (Sifriyah Ha-Hadashah Li-Menuyim, 2000 (1).)

Someone To Run With : A Novel (Sifriyah Ha-Hadashah Li-Menuyim, 2000 (1).)

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: All at once gritty and magical
Review: Assaf is not having a good summer. His parents have had to make an emergency trip to America, leaving him behind at a really boring job at Jersusalem City Hall. His best friend, whom he's protected from bullies since first grade, is suddenly the most popular boy in school and only willing to hang out with Assaf if Assaf joins him in activities Assaf would rather avoid. Missing his family and hopelessly bored at his make-work job, the moony sixteen-year-old is bewildered when his supervisor hands him the leash of the most disruptive dog in the animal shelter and tells him to go find the owner and hand that person a big citation for letting the yellow Labrador run loose. Suddenly, Assaf is being hauled all over town by an excited dog who seems to know exactly where she is going. Throughout the day he collects bits and pieces of information about the dog's owner, another sixteen-year-old who may be in trouble. He is determined to find this girl and return her beloved dog to her.

Across town, Tamar is a girl on a much more dangerous mission: to save a drug-addicted boy from an underworld impresario who sends talented runaway kids to perform on street corners across Israel, taking their earnings in return for drugs and a place to crash. The yellow Lab, Dinka, is her dog. How did they become separated? What is innocent Assaf getting involved in here? Who is the boy Tamar is trying to rescue?

I found this the most enjoyable of the David Grossman novels I've read. The translation by Vered Almog and Maya Gurantz is so fluid that "Someone to Run With" reads as though it was originally written in English. We get a look at a number of aspects of modern Israeli society from runaway and homeless teenagers to Assaf's close working-class family; from a cloistered nun to the mafia; from a big city that can still seem like a small town to wastelands where abandoned kids lie in ragged shelters. With skill and heart, Goodman shows, rather than tells us the differences and disparity in Israeli society. This enlightening adventure will satisfy both adult and older teen readers. ----Candace Siegle

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A different look at life in Jerusalem!
Review: Assaf, a 16-year-old living in Jerusalem, is sent to find the owner of a lost dog by following her at the end of a leash and to collect a fee for the dog's return. He does not immediately find the owner, but he does find other people who recognize Dinka as the dog of Tamar. One such person is the Greek nun Theodora who is happy to see Dinka but is more concerned about the disappearance of the dog's owner.

Grossman has created a story that involves the reader with a darker side of Jerusalem, but not the one that makes world news. Dealing with the world of the city's disenfranchised streets kids, the book unfolds a tale of two young people each with a mission and how their paths cross. The character's dialogues include much unspoken thought which provides a window into their uncertainties in dealing with others. It also reflects how what is spoken is often not exactly what one feels.

The time construction of the novel was a bit unusual. Each of the stories of the two main characters is a different length in time but converge in the end. The technique is done well and provides the reader with a chance to "put all the pieces together" as the story develops.

I especially like the dog who also is an important character. In fact, she is the thread that brings most of the characters together. And, like the dog, pulling Assaf along, this mini-mystery of a story has enough drive to pull its readers at a non-stop pace through to the end.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Young Adult Novel Set in Israel
Review: David Grossman is a major contemporary Jewish novelist whose writings have focused on Israel. His latest novel, Someone To Run With is a Young Adult novel about growing up under the strain of the constant threat of terrorism that Israelis have to face every day.

It is a novel with both fear and romance in its heart. One of the characters is a lady who has not gone outside for 50 years because of the terror threat. Despite the ever present threat of terrorism, this is at heart an optimistic novel in which the author clearly expresses his belief that things will get better soon.

Someone To Run With is both a great read and is recommended reading for these troubled times.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Young Adult Novel Set in Israel
Review: David Grossman is a major contemporary Jewish novelist whose writings have focused on Israel. His latest novel, Someone To Run With is a Young Adult novel about growing up under the strain of the constant threat of terrorism that Israelis have to face every day.

It is a novel with both fear and romance in its heart. One of the characters is a lady who has not gone outside for 50 years because of the terror threat. Despite the ever present threat of terrorism, this is at heart an optimistic novel in which the author clearly expresses his belief that things will get better soon.

Someone To Run With is both a great read and is recommended reading for these troubled times.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: a few words on the setting and translation
Review: I have just finished reading this book in Hebrew (and to some extent also in English),and it is indeed terrific. For readers who may wonder why there is no mention of terrorism in a book that takes place largely in Jerusalem, it should be noted that Grossman finished his novel in 1999, at a time when things were relatively peaceful. Since then, several dozen people have been killed or injured in bombing attacks that have occurred in the Ben Yehuda pedestrian mall area where much of the novel's action takes place -- even now, however, there are plenty of street performers in the area. Grossman definitely knows what he is writing about. Although it barely mentions current events, "Someone to Run With" is thoroughly rooted in its setting. I think I even know where Theodora's tower would be (on a certain side street about three blocks from the center of town), and I wouldn't be surprised if I were to run into Theodora herself one day, or Tamar's friend Leah, or Rhino, or even Mr. Honigman (though the last is perhaps a bit of a stretch).
Other readers have given good plot descriptions and have pointed to some of the wonderful things about this book -- perhaps most important, its two main characters, whom Grossman clearly (and rightfully) loves. Since Hebrew is not my mother tongue, I read the original version quite slowly, and perhaps for this reason was thoroughly caught up in the complexity of its plot. Grossman's Hebrew is both idiomatic and playful, but the assured quality of his writing does not always come through in the translation. The most egregious slips concern names: Mt. Scopus, for instance, is transliterated from the Hebrew as soemthing like "the Tzofim Mountain" even though its Latin name is quite well known, and the pedestrian mall is inexplicably rendered as "the Walking Street" (as opposed to a running street?). For some reason a character named Matziach in the original is called "Victorious" in English, which is downright silly (and inaccurate -- the name in Hebrew means "successful"). Such slips mar a text that, in the original, is thoroughly engrossing.



Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Someone To Run With Review
Review: I think that the book Someone To Run With is one of the best books I have ever read. The way that Grossman writes is very interesting and when I first picked up the book it seemed a little confusing. But once I got into the book I found out that the way he writes is different and more involved. This story line is kind of bizarre but after you catch the idea you just want to keep reading it. The characters constantly go from place to place and there is something around every corner. Even in the end when you think it is over what happens is something that you would have never expected. I recommend this to anyone who likes adventure books or just likes to read.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Despite translations errors, a fun read
Review: Is it an easy task to translate an award-winning Hebrew novel into English? Apparently not, at least in the case of David Grossman's "Someone to Run with" (Bloomsbury, 2003). Translators Vered Almog and Maya Gurantz have done an admirable job translating the rhythm, feeling and beat of Grossman's seventh novel, but they made some glaring mistakes.

Jerusalem residents and visitors will be a bit surprised to find the city's downtown pedestrian mall (Midrahov) in Hebrew) referred to as 'The Walking Street.' And no one would recognize the name of the city's well-known conference center, Binyanei Ha'Uma, when listed as the 'Nation's Building.'

But, translation errors and the frequent references to popular Hebrew songs aside, readers will have no trouble following the wonderful magic of this amazing bestseller, which won the 2001 Sapir Prize for Literature in Israel.

Readers will run with the book, from its very first sentence: "A dog runs through the streets, a boy runs after it." The boy is awkward and shy, sixteen-year-old Assaf, who is having the worst summer of his life. Spending his days at a lowly job in Jerusalem City Hall, Assaf is given an absurd assignment to find the owner of a stray yellow Labrador. The dog pulls Assaf along, and we follow them, as excited as Assaf to see where we'll be going.

Meanwhile, on the other side of town, Tamar, a talented singer with a lonely, tempestuous soul, undertakes an equally unpromising mission. It would be a crime to reveal in advance Tamar's undertaking, but let it suffice to say that she is dragged into the Jerusalem underworld, where Israeli street kids find refuge from the anxieties of family life in a society racked by self-doubt.

"Someone to Run with" is a mixture of fairy tale magic, gritty realism and powerful emotions. Assaf and Tamar keep running, away from their families and towards each other in
an adventure of adolescence and a discovery of young love. The portrayal of their actions, thoughts and emotions is harsh, and remarkably realistic. And that's a mighty accomplishment by an author, in any language.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: amazing book
Review: This book has to be among the best I've ever read. Too bad that it was originally written in Hebrew, and no one outside of Israel has heard of it. In this country, many teenagers and adults have read it, all have heard of it, and everyone I know loved it. I'm saying this not because I think the popularity of a book is the only mark of its quality, but because Someone to Run With has absolutely no other reviews on this site and I feel as though I should write in the name of all the Hebrew speaking fans of the book, not just myself.

Anyway: I just can't find enough words to express how much I enjoyed reading the book, how heart warming it was, how deeply I sympathized with the characters, and how good it makes me feel to know it's there on the shelf, where I can pick it up to reread at any moment. So instead, I'll try to explain just what's so wonderful about it.

Most importantly, the characterization. Each of the main characters - Asaf and Tamar - is completely real and believable. I swear I still look for them on the street... The author spends a lot of time inside their heads, revealing their views on the world, their frustrations with themselves and those around them, their quirks, just everything... There are so many moments when I think, that could have been me. Asaf and Tamar are also completely lovable, despite their weaknesses, which pulled me into the story and caused me to follow it with almost as much personal involvement as if they had been my best friends. Secondary characters abound and are richly developed and fascinating. My favorite is Theodora, an old nun from the Islands of Greece, who has spent fifty years of her life locked in a church, waiting for a miracle. Her purpose in life is to welcome pilgrims from her Island to the Holy City of Jerusalem, but the island was destroyed by tidal waves decades earlier, and her devotion is futile. Despite a lifetime of loneliness, imprisonment and shattered hopes, Theodora is still a feisty old lady, wise, shrewd, entertaining and kindly, who thrives on her friendship with the young Tamar. To summarize, the book would be worth reading for the sake of the characters only, even if it had absolutely no plot.

But it has a plot, and a wonderful one. Teenagers especially will enjoy it, as the characters deal with problems like loneliness, low self esteem, peer pressure, and unsupportive friends and family. As the book progresses, they also discover a little bit of true friendship and love. Added onto this is an element of danger and suspense. Tamar is forced to venture alone into an underworld of drugs and crime, to rescue a mysterious guitarist named Shai. Asaf's story begins roughly a month after Tamar's, when the dog pound finds Tamar's intelligent yellow dog Dinka running loose in the city. Asaf is delegated to find her owners by attaching a leash and following her wherever she leads. (By the way, the author insists this is an actual method of finding dog-owners - he witnessed it and it inspired the book.) Dinka leads Asaf on a wild goose chase through the city, during which he meets fascinating oddball characters, discovers new things about himself and the reality in which he lives, and is gradually drawn into Tamar's story. I won't reveal any more plot details, to avoid spoiling the book.

A few last words: I read this book in Hebrew, and I really don't know how good the translation is. There are some phrases I can imagine would be quite difficult to convert to English, and would lose much of their meaning in the translation. Also, there are some elements of the story (like allusions to Hebrew songs) that only an Israeli will truly understand. However, I rate the book on par with any English book I've ever read, and being more than half American myself, I believe foreigners should be able to enjoy the story. Also, I've heard many people say that the beginning of the book is a little slow, though personally I disagree. Anyway, please hang on, don't lose patience with Asaf, and it'll be worth your while. This is an amazing book. Spectacular. Worthy of all the superlatives in the dictionary, as well as worldwide recognition. Anyone fortunate enough to read this review, take it seriously, and read the novel, will know they've made an amazing and rare discovery and hurry to share it with the world, just the way I have.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Someone to Run With
Review: This is a touching and revealing coming-of-age novel. We follow Assaf as he attempts to find the owner of a dog. He discovers that the owner is a singer named Tamar, with whom he falls in love before meeting her. The scenes shift between Assaf and Tamar, who is trying to rescue another teenage boy from drug addiction and his directionless life on the streets of Israel. This was a huge bestseller in Israel in 2000 and has just been translated into English. I enjoyed it quite a bit


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