MAROR [url=] (Apollo ?20, 560pp) The body count has already risen to bewilderingly high levels by about page 50 of this bloody beast of a book, which is to Israeli history what Tarantino is to American movie culture. Zig-zagging across several decades, it's a frenetic sequence of action set-pieces, stuffed to the brim with drug dealers, gang lords and corrupt government officials, in which the line between law enforcer and criminal is invariably so hard to pin down that the reader feels stuck inside some eternal hall of mirrors. A policeman investigating a car bomb in 2003 Tel Aviv finds himself chasing shadows in his attempts to expose the perpetrator. A journalist investigating dodgy land deals realises corruption is at the heart of government. And everywhere in the background is Cohen, an inscrutable high-up member of the Israeli police force with a finger in every pie and a hand behind every string. Tidhar's cartoon-esque satire will not be to everyone's taste, but his merciless depiction of Israel has a startlingly refreshing absence of pieties.
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