I cannot recommend this book highly enough. It’s
The Finkler Question by Howard Jacobson, winner of the Man Booker Prize 2010.
He should have seen it coming. His life had been
one mishap after another. So he should have been prepared for this one…’
Julian Treslove, a professionally unspectacular former radio producer, and Sam Finkler, a popular Jewish philosopher, writer and television personality, are old school friends. Despite a prickly relationship and very different lives, they’ve never quite lost touch with each other - or with their former teacher, Libor Sevcik, a Czech always more concerned with the wider world than with exam results.
Julian Treslove, a professionally unspectacular former radio producer, and Sam Finkler, a popular Jewish philosopher, writer and television personality, are old school friends. Despite a prickly relationship and very different lives, they’ve never quite lost touch with each other - or with their former teacher, Libor Sevcik, a Czech always more concerned with the wider world than with exam results.
Now, both Libor and Sam are recently widowed, and
with Treslove, his chequered and unsuccessful record with women rendering him
an honorary third widower, they dine at Libor’s grand, central London
apartment.
It’s a sweetly painful evening of reminiscence in
which all three remove themselves to a time before they had loved and lost; a
time before they had fathered children, before the devastation of separations,
before they had prized anything greatly enough to fear the loss of it. Better,
perhaps, to go through life without knowing happiness at all because that way
you have less to mourn? Treslove finds he has tears enough for the unbearable
sadness of both his friends’ losses.
And it’s that very evening, at exactly 11:30, as
Treslove, walking home, hesitates a moment outside the window of the oldest
violin dealer in the country, that he is attacked. And after this, his whole
sense of who and what he is will slowly and ineluctably change.
The Finkler Question is a scorching
story of friendship and loss, exclusion and belonging, and of the wisdom and
humanity of maturity. Funny, furious, unflinching, this extraordinary novel shows one of our finest writers at his brilliant best.