There is a large cast of characters in City of a
Thousand Gates by Rebecca Sacks (HarperCollins, February 2021), and they live in close
proximity to one another. The narrative follows their lives as they interact,
although they rarely do. For the most part, the ensemble cast members avoid any
contact with each other.
For Israelis and Palestinians alike, terror and
tragedy are always present. On one side, a fourteen-year-old girl has been
stabbed to death in her home in an Israeli settlement. At about the same time,
a fourteen-year-old Arab boy has been beaten into a coma by an angry mob of
Israeli teenagers.
These events, and how the many protagonists deal
with their aftermath, are at the heart of this thought-provoking novel.
As the narrative follows the lives of Vera, Hamid,
Emily, and the others, the reader becomes privy to their innermost thoughts,
their desires, and their fears. Sometimes this exposure to their private lives
becomes a bit too personal for comfort. The occasional explicit passage about
sexual acts and fantasies distracts from the narrative and is not necessary for
understanding the characters.
The most climatic moment of the novel comes not at
its conclusion, but rather in its middle. It’s an explosive incident that draws
the cast closer together, yet at the same time it drives them further apart
than ever before.
For readers, the underlying message in the
compelling, parallel stories of the novel, is that we know little about those
who live on the other side of the fences and walls separating us. In City of a Thousand Gates, the author has given us glimpses of the other side. The
interlocking tales may be fiction, but at their core is the reality of our
lives.
Rebecca Sacks graduated from the Programs in
Writing at the University of California, Irvine. In 2019, she received a Canada
Council for the Arts grant, as well as the Joseph F. McCrindle Foundations
Henfield Prize for fiction. She has been awarded fellowships from the Bread
Loaf Writers Conference, the Juniper Summer Writing Institute and the
Mellon-Sawyer Documenting War Seminar Series. After graduating from Dartmouth
College, she worked for several years at Vanity Fair before moving to Israel,
where she received a masters in Jewish Studies. She is a citizen of Canada, the
United States, and Israel.
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