Full Description
In a profound exposé of human emotions under pressure, One Flight Up by Rachel Schorr is a novel like few before it, daring to explore real-world interpersonal conflicts with candor and blunt honesty.
Set
in Israel, where day to day living is often abrasively demanding, this
novel traces the emotional odyssey of a young couple, Avi and Tzippy
Greenwald, who wish to enlarge their two-bedroom apartment to make life
more comfortable for their eight children. According to Israeli law,
the consent of all apartment owners is required before anyone
undertakes any major building project. The Greenwald's are stunned that
the Brecher's, an elderly couple whom they regard as their adopted
Bubby and Zaidy, are the only ones in their building who are
unalterably opposed to the renovation.
Despite great acts of
kindness, alternating with cold acts of neglect, nothing changes the
Brecher's obdurate resistance to the young family's plea for consent.
The neighbors weigh in and the situation escalates into a war of words
and ill-will.
The Brecher's never disclose the reasons for their
strange refusal, even during the waning months of their lives. After
her husband's death, Mrs. Brecher entrusts a diary to Tzippy Greenwald.
This moving document will eventually become instrumental in changing
perceptions, and will be a key to solve much that had previously
appeared puzzling and incomprehensible.
Subtle, absorbing, and
replete with surprises, One Flight Up is more than just "a great read."
It's a novel that delivers a story line that leaves the reader guessing
until the last chapter.
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