Circling Eden: A Novel of Israel in Stories

Circling Eden: A Novel of Israel in Stories

by Carol Magun
Circling Eden: A Novel of Israel in Stories

Circling Eden: A Novel of Israel in Stories

by Carol Magun

eBook

$11.99  $15.99 Save 25% Current price is $11.99, Original price is $15.99. You Save 25%.

Available on Compatible NOOK devices, the free NOOK App and in My Digital Library.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers

LEND ME® See Details

Overview

Weeks before she's set to depart for her junior year in Paris, Rebecca Harrison announces her intention to spend the year in Israel instead. There she finds her yearning for acceptance thwarted at every turn. The society she had vaguely imagined as the embodiment of everything missing from her own experience seems to offer no place of entry for a single woman an amerika'it, an assimilated Jew. Circling Eden is a poignant rendering of how it feels to be a woman in modern-day Israel. The action is set in 1973, the year of the Yom Kippur War.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781613732076
Publisher: Chicago Review Press, Incorporated
Publication date: 08/30/2005
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 200
File size: 845 KB

About the Author

Carol Magun lived and worked in Israel for nine years. She is the winner of the first Jack Kerouac Literary Award, a Fiction Fellow and emerging writer of promise at the Wesleyan Writers' Conference, and a recipient of a fiction grant from the Massachusetts Arts Council. She's been a long-time college teacher of modern literature and creative writing, most recently at Caltech in Pasadena.

Read an Excerpt

Circling Eden

A Novel of Israel in Stories


By Carol Magun

Chicago Review Press Incorporated

Copyright © 1995 Carol Magun
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-61373-207-6



CHAPTER 1

MAKE-BELIEVE

* * *


Rebecca jiggled the key in the lock, pushing hard, down a bit, to the side, up again. Nothing worked. She closed her eyes, didn't care if the door opened or not, but the lock wasn't fooled. "Lech le'azazel!" Go to Hell! Lately it seemed that this was to be the extent of her Hebrew conversation. She kicked the door and headed around to the side of the house and her bedroom window.

She climbed up onto the upside-down clay planter, always ready beneath her window, and swung open the green iron shutters. The telephone was still ringing. She knew it was Ethan. A rabbi's son from Las Vegas, he had tutored her for this morning's Hebrew final, the one that would decide whether she'd be stuck in the English section for visiting Americans or be allowed to take courses in "easy Hebrew" at the university. He was also the closest thing she had over here to a girlfriend, and she looked forward more to their kibbitzing, as he called their daily telephone conversations, than their occasional lovemaking.

And then, just as she pushed the window open and hoisted herself up over the sill, the ringing stopped. She tumbled headlong onto her bed. But something was wrong, she realized, and almost as she thought it, someone pinned her arms high behind her back.

"Haamerika'it." More groan than word. Then the weight on top of her went suddenly limp.

She recognized the smell of his body even before she noticed the uniform in a heap on the floor, dusty boots still in the pantlegs. "Yigal." She tried to catch her breath. "Yigal." For almost two months now they had been sharing the same bed, he on week-ends, she during the week, but they had never met. That was the arrangement Rebecca had worked out with Mrs Lipski: Rebecca could have the room on the condition that she turn it over to the widow's son on Shabbat when he was expected home from the army. "Nice to meet you," Rebecca said in her best three-month-old Hebrew.

By the time she gathered herself up, he was leaning against the headboard, bare to the waist, a sheet wrapped tight around his middle. He had a frowning, unshaved face and red watery eyes, not at all what his photograph had led her to expect.

She tried to ask him what he was doing here on a Tuesday, but again the Hebrew phrases refused to come. Just like this morning.

"Americans don't use doors anymore?" he exploded in English.

"My key doesn't always work. And never when I'm in a hurry." Her initial impulse had been to clear out, hand the bed over to him, but his arrogance changed her mind. After all, it was Tuesday, her day for the bed. She tucked her legs under her and faced him across the length of the mattress.

Yigal squinted, holding his arm up against the white light that flooded in through the now-open shutter. "You don't look like you're in a hurry," he said very seriously.

She tossed her hand in a typically Israeli gesture. She had more luck with the gestures than the language. "The phone was ringing. It stopped."

"The phone?" He broke into a grin. "And who you want to call you?"

She hesitated. For the first time she recognized him from the picture she had found tucked between the pages of his English grammar book. It was a glossy black-and-white army photograph, and he was decked out in full battle gear. Only his chin strap flapped open, his helmet sat crooked on his head, a jaunty smile took up most of his face. He looked more like a good-natured kid on a hike than the commando she'd imagined from his mother's talk. One day she even showed the picture to Mrs Lipski, just to make sure the boy really was Yigal, and not some cousin or friend. Mrs Lipski, faded and stringy, stared at the picture a long time.

"It's not real," she said at last, jerking her head in what Rebecca had come to realize was a nervous tic.

Rebecca peered at the upside-down soldier. "The smile?"

"The battle. All make-believe. Your Mickey Mouse."

"Oh." She had difficulty understanding Mrs Lipski. Those first weeks she had blamed the woman's staccato English, more pellets than phrases. She was never quite sure how to string them together. But lately she noticed that Mrs Lipski seemed to be watching her lips, as if she were having the same problem following Rebecca.

Mrs Lipski strained forward. Her crepe skin formed a rift from forehead to chin. "Can it be? The Golani? You never heard?"

Rebecca started chewing her lip.

"It's our Oxford and Cambridge," Mrs Lipski continued, her voice falling to a confiding whisper." Only no fancy degrees. You pass the big test, you get a pin. An eagle with claws. Over here." She touched her flattish bosom. "You understand?"

"Kind of."

Mrs Lipski pulled back with an exasperated sigh. "The test, the battle," she said, shaking her finger back and forth. "Not real bullets."

"Oh ..." Rebecca stopped chewing her lip. "You mean the test is a mock battle."

"Mock? Is funny, no? Yes, Yigal's happy. He passed. Me?" Mrs Lipski pressed her palms together and brought them to her chin. "God no pass him." Then, without another glance at the picture, she handed it back, as if it were really Rebecca's, and turned away.

Rebecca returned the photograph to the English grammar, but instead of putting the book back on the shelf, she kept it on the nightstand beside the bed. She liked to read the Hebrew words scribbled in pencil next to the English, the translated idioms. "A rolling stone gathers no moss." She remembered learning that one in French. But it was the picture of the boy, the smile, she somehow always came back to.


"So who you want to call you?" Yigal repeated, still grinning.

"No one in particular," she said with a shrug. "I just know that if it rings during the day, with your mother at work, it's for me."

"And for that you jump through a window?" He shook his head.

The sheet around his middle had loosened and Rebecca noticed dark curls sprouting from the smooth skin. She looked away. Remembering the pin Mrs Lipski had mentioned, she studied the uniform on the floor, first the pocket, then the shoulder, but she could see no pin or patch or rank anywhere. Only the word, Zahal, the Hebrew abbreviation for the Israel Defense Forces, stamped in faded black letters. "They're battle fatigues," she whispered, turning back to him.

He said nothing, just stared.

Finally, she understood. He'd been out on a commando raid the night before and was now home on leave. He must have just thrown himself on the bed to sleep. Her chest contracted, with shame, selfishness, her own stupidity. She was about to apologize for disturbing him, but even in English her words were suddenly slow in forming and he got there first.

"... I'm sorry if I hurt you, I didn't mean to," he mumbled, looking at his hand, massaging it. "I was just dozing off and ..."

"And you thought it was still last night."

He jerked his head, almost like his mother. "I forgot the amerika'im love the psychiatry. Shrinks, they call the psychiatrim, no? In the army magazine I read about an amerika'it who even sent her dog to a shrink."

She flushed. "Listen. It's Tuesday. My day for the bed." She swung her hand toward the door. "You can sleep in your mother's bed."

"I don't want to sleep in my mother's bed." He reached across and caught her above the elbow. "I want to sleep in my bed. With you."

She pulled her arm free. "Is that also what they tell you in your army magazine? An amerika'it will sleep with anyone?"

"Why you have the birth control pills?"

"Why do you go through my things? You have no right." And it wasn't just her pill dispenser he'd examined, spinning the round plastic cover like a broken telephone dial so that the dates were all wrong. For weeks now she'd found letters from Michael folded against the crease, snapshots out of order, even her passport upside down in her travel wallet. Not that his curiosity about her had really bothered her. Just the opposite. Saturday nights first thing she'd do was go through her possessions, one by one, determining what he had touched, speculating what he might have thought.

He smiled, and she blushed deeper. She knew what was coming.

"You read my books. You sleep in my bed." He bunched up the sheet, her sheet, in his right hand.

"And you could at least change the sheets," she countered, fighting the urge to yank it from his hand. For the first couple of weeks, she had changed them herself, refusing to complain. She couldn't bear to justify Mrs Lipski's view of her as a spoiled amerika'it. Then, the third week, she had been so tired after having spent Shabbat on the beach with Ethan that she crawled straight into Yigal's unmade bed. Since then their shared sheets never bothered her.

"In the army I must to sleep on my ammunition. I hate the smell." He hesitated, grinning, almost sheepishly. "A woman's smell is much nicer."

"Yes. I guess it is," she said. Then she could think of nothing else to say.

After a silence he held out his hand.

This time she reached back.


Afterward, Rebecca felt the hot sun through the window, the sweat on Yigal's back, and knew it was for Yigal that she had come here, to this country, this house, this bed. Since high school, she had assumed that she would spend her junior year in Paris — all part of a no-nonsense plan that led from college, through law school, to a partnership in her father's firm. She had no brothers, and her father had raised her to outrun, outsmart, outfinagel any guy. And she had. Then one day in her sophomore year, she was lying in bed with Michael in his room at Yale when the news came on. At the end there was an interview with some Jewish teenagers who had gone over to Israel a few years back, just after the Six Day War. Against a backdrop of date palms they talked about what it was like, what they were doing, why they had stayed. Suddenly, Michael reached over and flicked off the switch. She turned it back on.

"Afterwards," she said, brushing his hand from her breast.

Michael sat up and reached for his underwear. "No thanks."

"Don't get so pissed," she said, not bothering to even look at him. "It's almost over."

"For chrissakes you're not even Jewish."

"There. Over." She turned off the television and nestled back into the pillow. She had a great body and liked showing it off. "Of course I'm Jewish," she said, only now really registering what he'd said. "You know that." How could he not know? They had been lovers for over a year. She had told him things she had told no one else.

He shook his head.

"For chrissakes my name's Rebecca."

"Rebecca Harrison," he smiled back. "Hey, it's no big deal. I guess it just never came up." His underpants were off again, and he was reaching for her.

"My grandfather changed ..."

"It's not important," he said, stopping her words with a kiss.

But as soon as they finished making love, she started in again. "But I must have told you about my grandfather, how he'd take me behind his store, to the old warehouse, and show me this peddler's cart that had belonged to his father, my great-grandfather ..."

"Becky, what's the point?"

There was a silence.

"I don't know," she finally said. "But I feel as if I just discovered I shrank an inch, or my IQ dropped ten points. Or I couldn't remember the opening stanza to Longfellow's Evangeline.' You know, 'This is the forest primeval ...'" She looked over at him. "Or are you going to tell me I never told you that either?"

"Yes, I know all about your 'Evangeline,'" he sighed. "You used to recite pages and pages of it inthe woods behind your house. You were seven ..."

"Six."


She applied to the junior-year program in Jerusalem without telling a soul, not Michael, not her parents, not even her college advisor. She feared she would be expected to provide answers, reasons, explanations. And she had none. Just the vague presentiment that there might be less of her than she'd always assumed. To her surprise, when she finally announced that she would be spending the following year in Jerusalem, not Paris, no one asked, no one probed, no one challenged. Instead, they ascribed to her all sorts of reasonable motives she might have had but didn't. To her father it was a cut-and-dry case of "flirtation with Zionism" — not so different, he insisted, from his own "adolescent flirtation with Communism" in the thirties. A mistake, no doubt, but one she probably had to get out of her system. "Like a bug, a virus." Michael, much more laid back, just called it her "Jewish thing" and gave her a plastic figurine of a soldier with a red-and-white striped parachute as a going-away present.

At the airport everyone seemed to know one another already. They hugged hello. They exchanged news of teachers and camps and friends. They compared lists of what they'd brought. Hair conditioner, Tampax, toilet paper, erasable typing paper, peanut butter, tuna fish. Apart from her clothes, Rebecca had brought only a set of sheets, a sleeping bag, a pocket sewing kit (her mother's idea) and a Swiss army knife (her father's).

"Israel is a land of many immigrants. Israel is a land of many climates. Israel is a land of many borders ..."

The group leader shouted to make himself heard over the non-stop chatter, still going strong after almost twenty hours of travel. NIFTY. NEFTY. BEFTY. By the time the bus deposited them outside the boxy highrise dormitory at the edge of Jerusalem, the words sounded less like acronyms for Jewish youth groups than secret passwords between members of one huge club. Rebecca didn't even know the Hebrew alphabet. For her first month she believed the poster on the back of the Egged bus advertised "Lugum" soda in English, not Tempo soda in modern Hebrew script.

Only Ethan found her ignorance touching. "How did a nice girl like you end up in a place like this?" They were trekking across the wadi from the bus stop to the university. It hadn't rained since spring, and everything that should have been green was brown. Her eyelids burned. The blisters on her feetwere coated with dust.

"'This is the garden primeval ...'" she managed to get out before she choked up.

An hour later she was in the central post office, on the phone to her father. "The virus is gone. I'm better. I want to come home."

He laughed, a bad sign. He never gave in to her when he laughed. "Oh no, sweetheart," he finally said. "You made your bed. Now you sleep in it. It won't kill you."

"How do you know? You should see the Americans they stuck me with."

"Then move."

She moved to the Lipskis.

The room had been listed with the student housing agency, but when Rebecca called, the woman insisted that the room was not for an amerika'it. Rebecca showed up anyway.

The house itself was one of the oldest outside the Old City walls. Once grand, it was now dilapidated and cut up into three flats. Laundry flapped from rusted balconies. Succulents sprouted from cracks in the foundation. Even the garden had gone to seed, palms mixed with pines and sedgy grass, no flowers at all. But the sunken pool was still filled with water and stocked with the largest goldfish Rebecca had ever seen. The woman — no hips, fair, hair drooping into a sloppy bun — took her first into the bathroom. "No heat, no running hot water, and the tub ... kaput." Rebecca noticed only the scrolled ceramic tiles hanging loose on the wall.

The woman then took her to the bedroom, next to the bathroom and half the size. "The servant's room. Many years ago." It reminded Rebecca of a monk's cell, except for the white light that streamed in from the single window.

"I'll take it."

"Impossible. Not for an amerika'it."

"But I'm not really an amerika'it," Rebecca pleaded.

"My older son comes home on Shabbat. The room is for an Israeli student who also goes home."

"I'll leave for Shabbat," Rebecca interrupted, without even considering where she'd go.

Mrs Lipski hesitated, then broke into a crooked smile. "My goldfish, you want to see?"


Rebecca closed her eyes, aware now only of Yigal's body, covering her, weighing her down with pleasure. She suddenly knew what had been bothering her these past months: a growing sense of lightness, of floating past people and things. Untouched and not touching.

She heard the telephone ring, but paid no attention, until Yigal shifted his weight onto his knees.

"Your telephone," he said.

"So what?"

She tried to draw him back to her, but he ducked her embrace and sat up.

"You going to pick up, or I?"

"Please don't ..." she murmured, but he was already on his way out the door.

"She moved," she heard Yigal say, first in English, then in Hebrew, before he banged down the receiver.

Back in the room, she watched him pull on his clothes. "He doesn't mean anything to me," she said, breaking the silence.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Circling Eden by Carol Magun. Copyright © 1995 Carol Magun. Excerpted by permission of Chicago Review Press Incorporated.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Contents

1. Make Believe,
2. Inside Out,
3. Pilgrims,
4. Nefesh HaGolan,
5. A Matter of Time,
6. The Wedding,
7. Santa Katerina,
8. Like a Bride Across a Threshold,
9. At the Old Border,

What People are Saying About This

George Garrett

"...spare, tightly focused and deeply evocative...summons up an altogether honest and authentic vision of Israel in our time, gracefully...a remarkable book by a greatly gifted writer."

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews