Home    >    Hunting in America

Hunting in America

A study in cultural absorption: how violence enters the body and rewires the mind ... The rifles gleam and the deer bleed, but Hunting in America is a workplace novel at heart ... The language of the hunt bleeds easily into the language of productivity: targets, headcounts, eliminations. Joanna Chen’s translation preserves these cold-blooded cadences ... The recoil of the past two years rattles through its silences, its evasions and deferrals, its blind spots and cruelties. There is a shot the woman takes – alone, in the snow – that has ugly consequences. The question that haunts her is whether she meant to take it. That same irresolvable question haunts this novel.
Read Full Review >>
Haunting ... With restrained and beauti­ful prose, Haki­mi spins an intox­i­cat­ing­ly strange tale about an Israeli woman relo­cat­ing to Amer­i­ca ... Haki­mi is an accom­plished poet, which is evi­dent in her mas­tery of imagery. The nov­el will be acces­si­ble to more read­ers thanks to Joan­na Chen’s expert trans­la­tion into English ... Through her care­ful sto­ry­telling, Haki­mi deft­ly weaves in com­plex themes of alien­ation, per­spec­tive, desire, dis­con­nec­tion, and the nor­mal­iza­tion of violence.
Read Full Review >>
Provocative ... Told differently, the novel could be a classic noir, but Hakimi keeps the reader on their toes with the narrative’s disarming obliqueness and ambiguity, all the way to the final crack of a gunshot. This tantalizes.
Read Full Review >>

Related Books