Ofer
does not come home that evening or during the night or in the morning. The next
day the police begin an intensive investigation into what has happened to the
missing Ofer.
Avraham
is wracked with guilt over not commencing the investigation the previous night.
His feelings are intensified by the memory of his attitude towards Hannah.
There
are no leads. Ofer has lived a quiet life. He goes to school. He does his
homework. He plays on the computer. He helps take care of sister, Danit, who
has Down’s Syndrome, and his young brother. He is not a troublemaker. He has
few friends. He does not have a girlfriend. There is no one with whom he is
having trouble. There is no reason for him to disappear. There is no one in the
apartment building or the school or the community with a reason to harm him. He
has no money to go anywhere.
An
anonymous phone call saying the body is in some sand dunes near the apartment
in Holon (a city just south of Tel Aviv on the coast) causes a futile search.
The
caller is Ze’ev Avni, a teacher who lives with his family in the apartment
below the Sharabi family. He has had a closer connection to Ofer than anyone
outside the immediate family. He had tutored Ofer in English until the sessions
were abruptly terminated.
Ze’ev
has engimatic thoughts about Ofer. Can the reason for the disappearance involve
this rather vain aspiring writer who seeks to stay close to the police?
Ofer’s
father, Rafael, is unable to help the police. He is on a ship in the
Mediterranean and cannot get back to Israel for several days.
Avraham
struggles to move the investigation ahead and struggles even more with a
continuing sense of regret.
The
investigation is stalled until Ze’ev takes actions that startled me.
The
rather plodding pace of the book then accelerates to an ending I had not
anticipated.
I
found Avraham a rather frustrating police officer. The chain smoking, single,
38 year old Avraham is insecure and consumed with self-doubt. His somber nature
would fit well in Scandavia. How can he conduct effective investigations so preoccupied
with his own issues?
There
is some fine lyric writing, especially since the book has been translated from
Hebrew:
That morning,
the blue skies stretched out above them as they made their way to the police
station, and the breeze, as light as a feather, that accompanied them on their
way remained with him long after the case closed.
The
closing section lifted The Missing File
from an average book and left me wanting to find out what happens in the next
Avraham Avraham mystery. In that book, if Mishani can move the whole story
along at a better tempo and bring some light into Avraham’s life he will have a
good series underway.
It
is the second Israeli written and set mystery I have read in a row. Just over a
week ago I finished Lineup by Liad
Shoham.
Mishani
brings an intriguing background to his writing. I will repeat a quote from the
back cover I put up in a recent post:
D.A. Mishani is
the editor of Israeli fiction and crime literature at Keter Books in Israel and
is a literary scholar specializing in the history of detective literature.
My
next post will look at references to crime fiction in The Missing File. (Feb. 22/14)
Now I want to know: did you notice in this book the features of Israeli crime fiction that you mentioned in the post about the previous author? And I will be very interested to read the post about the references to crime fiction.,
ReplyDeleteMoira: Thanks for the comment. The answer to what you want to know will be in my next post. Astute reader that you are you detected what part of the post will cover.
DeleteBill - Your review has reminded me of how important pacing is to a novel. I'm glad there was enough in the novel to keep you interested in the series and wondering what will happen in the next novel. And the mystery itself sounds intriguing.
ReplyDeleteMargot: Thanks for the comment. Unless there is enough pace I find myself drifting away while reading which leads to putting the book down and picking up another.
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