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The Hilltop: A Novel Paperback – October 13, 2015
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On a rocky hilltop stands Ma’aleh Hermesh C, a fledgling outpost of Jewish settlers in the West Bank. According to government records it doesn’t exist; according to the military it must be defended. On this contested land, Othniel Assis—under the wary gaze of the Palestinians in the neighboring village—lives on his farm with his ever-expanding family. As Othniel cheerfully manipulates government agencies, more settlers arrive, and a hodge-podge of shipping containers and mobile homes takes root.
One steadfast resident is Gabi Kupper, a former kibbutz dweller who savors the delicate routines of life on the settlement. When Gabi’s prodigal brother, Roni, arrives penniless on his doorstep with a bizarre plan to sell the “artisanal” olive oil from the Palestinian village to Tel Aviv yuppies, Gabi worries his life won’t stay quiet for long. Then a nosy American journalist stumbles into Ma’aleh Hermesh C, and Gabi’s worst fears are confirmed. The settlement becomes the focus of an international diplomatic scandal, facing its greatest threat yet.
This “indispensable novel” (The Wall Street Journal) skewers the complex, often absurd reality of life in Israel. Grappling with one of the most charged geo-political issues of our time, “Gavron’s story gains a foothold in our hearts and minds and stubbornly refuses to leave” (Kirkus Reviews, starred review).
- Print length464 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- Publication dateOctober 13, 2015
- Dimensions5.25 x 1.2 x 8 inches
- ISBN-101476760446
- ISBN-13978-1476760445
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Editorial Reviews
Review
"Expansive, humorous . . . Gavron's satiric touches can be coruscating . . ." ― The New Yorker
"[A] brilliant book . . ." ― The New York Times Book Review
"The Great Israeli Novel. . . . Assaf Gavron stakes his claim to be Israel’s Jonathan Franzen . . . Gavron writes realistic fiction with a comic edge that aims to take the temperature of his whole society, to tell us how Israelis live now . . . a cutting satire." -- Adam Kirsch ― Tablet
"A middle vision between the ridiculous and the sublime. . . . Highlights the way nothing (or no one) is isolated anymore. Investment bankers may become Israeli settlers; Palestinian villagers have lawyers in the family. . . . The pleasure of The Hilltop is that it doesn't offer easy outcomes . . ." -- David Ulin ― Los Angeles Times
"In The Hilltop, Gavron’s unique gift is on full display in all of its eccentric, genre-bending glory. He treads the line between the serious and the absurd, the tragic and the comical, the sincere and the satirical, and creates a sweeping, complex story that raises more questions than it provides answers." -- Khaled Hosseini, author of The Kite Runner
"It is no exaggeration to say that Assaf Gavron is the most exciting, inventive, and though-provoking Israeli novelist of our generation.The Hilltop is a perfect example of the wry and satirical style that has made him a household name in Israel and it is sure to do the same for him here in the U.S. I loved this book." -- Reza Aslan, New York Times-bestselling author of Zealot and No god but God
"An ambitious novel, a distanced overview, meticulously realistic . . . Gavron represents a distinctly new generation of Israeli writing." ― The Times Literary Supplement (London)
"Deals with Israel's overaching conflicts—Jew versus Jew, Jew versus Palestinian—and presents them with a nuanced complexity that feels very real. It's a funny and ultimately melancholy read." ― NPR
"Assaf Gavron allows us to understand the political situation in the Middle East in careful, profound and nuanced terms. He is unafraid to go into zones of conflict and find the essential human contradictions there. Gavron’s work is engaging in the way that all good literature entertains—it is, in fact, very funny—but it also has lasting purpose. He is one of the most agile and necessary voices of contemporary Israeli literature.” -- Colum McCann, National Book Award-winning author of Let the Great World Spin and TransAtlantic
"Writing with crisp insight and dry humor, Israeli author Gavron (Almost Dead, 2010, etc.) tells a lively tale of life in an embattled Jewish settlement on an arid, rocky West Bank hilltop in this award-winning novel. . . . Gabi’s and Roni’s stories unfold gradually, and in the midst of this wise and waggish tale, we may find ourselves feeling unexpectedly invested in these disparate brothers' fates. Slowly and incrementally, like those settlers on that craggy West Bank hilltop, Gavron’s story gains a foothold in our hearts and minds and stubbornly refuses to leave." ― Kirkus (starred review)
"Wittily details the winks, nods, and semantic play that enable so many—officially illegal—settlements such as Ma'aleh Hermesh C. to remain and even expand. . . . Gavron's story is infused with gentle, everyday humor and flickers of kindness, including between Arabs and Jews." ― Financial Times (London)
"Assaf Gavron is one of the most original and powerful writers on the Israeli scene. His clear and honest writing blasts right through the clichés and the politically correct surface to touch the chaotic, ambiguous core of the Israeli identity. The Hilltop is Gavron's latest and most impressive attempt to map the Israeli society. His perspective is a must-read for every seriously curious reader." -- Etgar Keret, author of The Nimrod Flipout and Suddenly, a Knock at the Door
"This many-storied, funny, shrewd, and tender satire dives into the heart of Israel, a land of trauma and zeal, fierce opinions and endless deliberation. From failed marriages to governmental dysfunction to the tragic Israeli-Palestinian conflict, Gavron’s spirited desert saga embraces the absurd and the profound and advocates for compassion and forgiveness, even joy." ― Booklist (starred review)
"The Hilltop shimmers with wisdom, truth, humor, and melancholy. It’s a beautiful novel to behold, even if the world it depicts is vigorously alive, like a poke to the eye." -- Amos Oz, New York Times-bestselling author of A Tale of Love and Darkness
"Sardonic and engaging. . . . Gavron excels at unmasking the contradictions that characterize Israeli society. . . . His hilltop may be fictionalized, but it embodies, perhaps more than any journalistic or documentary attempt in recent years, the mechanisms by which extremism crosses over and adopts the bureaucratic language and signifiers of the officially sanctioned." ― Haaretz
"The great novel of Israel’s inner life." ― Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung
"In The Hilltop, Assaf Gavron tackles the intractable stew that is West Bank settlement. A book that further cements his place as one of today’s truly committed, political Israeli novelists.” -- Nathan Englander, author of What We Talk About When We Talk About Anne Frank
"A rich, complex story of Israeli settlers in the West Bank. . . . Gavron’s novel is marked by its great depth of feeling and its disparate themes.” ― Publisher's Weekly
"Gavron expertly works with a large cast of characters to create a resonant portrayal of life at the center of one of the world's main trouble spots. . . . This novel, an award winner in Israel, is very funny and entertaining." ― Library Journal
"Gavron deeply implicates America in Israel's troubles . . . Compelling . . . Touchingly human." ― The Forward
"Compelling narrative prose . . . The Hilltop is recommended to all readers . . ." ― New York Journal of Books
"Something entirely new—a comic settlement-saga that attempts to understand the terrible saga of the settlements." ― The Guardian (London)
"A unique attempt to consider the phenomenon [of illegal settlements] not from a merely political point of view, but as a tale of human endeavor, in all its glory and its folly." ― The Jerusalem Post
“By turns, serious and satirical, The Hilltop skewers the complex, often absurd reality of life in Israel, the West Bank settlers, and the nation’s relationship to the United States.” ― Jewish Books in Brief
About the Author
Product details
- Publisher : Scribner; Reprint edition (October 13, 2015)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 464 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1476760446
- ISBN-13 : 978-1476760445
- Item Weight : 12.8 ounces
- Dimensions : 5.25 x 1.2 x 8 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,033,745 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #1,551 in Jewish Literature & Fiction
- #2,567 in Political Fiction (Books)
- #48,247 in Literary Fiction (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Assaf Gavron was Born in 1968, and published five novels (Ice, Moving, Almost Dead, Hydromania and The Hilltop), a collection of short stories (Sex in the cemetery), and a non-fiction collection of Jerusalem falafel-joint reviews (Eating Standing Up).
His fiction has been translated into German, Russian, Italian, French, English, Dutch, Swedish, Greek and Bulgarian. His latest novel is The Hilltop (Scribner, 2014).
Among the awards he won are the Israeli Prime Minister’s Creative Award for Authors, the Israeli Bernstein Prize for The Hilltop, the DAAD artists-in-Berlin fellowship in Germany, the Buch Fur Die Stadt award in Germany for Almost Dead and the Prix Courrier International award in France for the same novel.
His fiction was adapted for the stage in Habima – Israel’s national theatre, and four of his novels are under option to be adapted to film and TV.
As a translator of fiction, Gavron is responsible for the highly-regarded English-to-Hebrew translations of J.D. Salinger’s Nine Stories, Philip Roth’s Portnoy’s Complaint and Jonathan Safran Foer’s novels, among others. He also co-translated his own novel Almost Dead from Hebrew to English.
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the book easy to read and enjoyable. They appreciate the humor, insight, and character development. The writing style is fast-paced and well-written, with a sophisticated yet simple approach. The story is described as moving and engaging, depicting Israeli life today.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the book enjoyable and easy to read. They say it's a good book to put you to sleep and well worth the effort.
"Fabulous writer and a great novel. This book has given me a very different view of Jews who establish and live in outpost settlements...." Read more
"...Its a fast and compelling read and i learned something in the process...." Read more
"...what I liked about the book: I could open it up at bedtime, read a few short chapters, go to sleep, then want to do the same the next night...." Read more
"all in all, it's a very good novel that describes and presents Israeli life - kibbutz, settlements in the West Bank, Tel Aviv.... it presents in..." Read more
Customers enjoy the book's humor. They find it ironic and humorous, with positive portrayals and wisdom. Some readers appreciate the humorous jabs at Israeli bureaucracy.
"This knowledgable and humorous book (pre war in Gaza) dives into the shenanigans of some diverse Israeli settlers and their equally diverse and..." Read more
"...of the baroque bureaucracies of the Israel government, and a very comic sense of things. All this gives the novel no little credit." Read more
"...obtaining permits and registrations, allowances and approvals, is very funny (it's the DMV on steroids) and puts a human face on the very human..." Read more
"...The book is at the same time amusing and also dark...." Read more
Customers find the book insightful, informative, and humorous. They appreciate that it explains the complexity of human experiences and provides a picture of the diversity of opinions. The book is described as knowledgeable and sophisticated, describing Israeli life in an engaging way.
"This knowledgable and humorous book (pre war in Gaza) dives into the shenanigans of some diverse Israeli settlers and their equally diverse and..." Read more
"...with the settlers are as human and finely drawn and as understandable as the settlers. Everyone in this novel is just trying to get by...." Read more
"Great topic but often boring." Read more
"...The obviousness of this reach mars the book. It is not an organic display of people living their lives, but more a showcase...." Read more
Customers appreciate the character development. They find the characters well-developed with a decent backstory that enhances the events.
"...It is beautifully written with completely believable characters...." Read more
"...But the characters are all sympathetic, even if rogues, and some are more innocent than others...." Read more
"...Totally believable cast of characters." Read more
"...All the main and minor characters are male, women rarely speak in their own voices and are relegated to wife, mother, kindergarten teacher roles." Read more
Customers enjoy the book's writing style. They find it well-written, fast-paced, and easy to follow. The writing style is sophisticated yet simple to understand. Readers describe the book as an insightful and humorous read that is widely read in Israel.
"Fabulous writer and a great novel. This book has given me a very different view of Jews who establish and live in outpost settlements...." Read more
"...this book specifically because our rabbi recommended it as very widely read in Israel and as a good possibility for a synagogue discussion...." Read more
"...Gavrons writing style is fast paced and easy to follow but it is also sophisticated...." Read more
"...People are complicated. It was well written and had marvelous descriptions of different persons' experiences of difficult moments in life...." Read more
Customers enjoyed the story. They found it well-written and engaging, with interesting new angles and descriptions of different characters' experiences. The plot and character development were also praised. Overall, readers described the book as a moving tale of love and intertwined souls.
"...It was well written and had marvelous descriptions of different persons' experiences of difficult moments in life...." Read more
"...to Tel Aviv to New York to the West Bank in the course of telling a deeply moving story of two flawed brothers, one secular, one religious, who..." Read more
"Well written story focused on brothers, one secular and one orthodox, and various people in the outpost community next to Arab olive groves...." Read more
"Wonderful story providing a sympathetic view of the settler movement (or at least some of the settlers)...." Read more
Customers find the book provides an honest look at Israeli life and settlements. They appreciate that Palestinians are only a small part of the story, while the bulk of the book provides a sympathetic view of the settler movement.
"...obstacle to peace in the region, I found the representations of the settlers relatively sympathetic. I attribute this to the skill of the author." Read more
"all in all, it's a very good novel that describes and presents Israeli life - kibbutz, settlements in the West Bank, Tel Aviv.... it presents in..." Read more
"...The great part is that the Palestinians are only a small part of the story, while the bulk of the book focuses upon the unconventional characters..." Read more
"Full of humor, confounding and insightful, The Hilltop provides a picture of modern Israel that successfully captures its people - in Israel proper..." Read more
Customers find the book visually appealing. They appreciate the finely drawn characters and modern-day lives in Israel.
"...their lives, their intersection with the settlers are as human and finely drawn and as understandable as the settlers...." Read more
"Nice ,short chapters, made it easy to stop and wanting soon to pick up." Read more
"...An amazing painting of modern-day lives in Israel." Read more
"I thought this was a funny and revealing look at what happens with Settlements in Palestine!." Read more
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on July 20, 2024This knowledgable and humorous book (pre war in Gaza) dives into the shenanigans of some diverse Israeli settlers and their equally diverse and wily Palestinian neighbours. You’ll learn and laugh. So much more fun and truth than what you can get from reading the news.
- Reviewed in the United States on April 13, 2015The Hilltop: A Novel, by Assaf Gavron, has been called the “Great Israeli Novel” which I suppose means, that in a serious sense, it captures the various currents of the current Israeli experience in novel form, in one stream. Yes, I can see that label, and in many ways it fits. The problem is the novel is very programmatic in its attempts to show all the sides of the Israeli experience. The obviousness of this reach mars the book. It is not an organic display of people living their lives, but more a showcase. So in some ways the presentation of the characters and their situations is a bit stilted and obvious.
That said, Gavron has written a novel with many redeeming qualities. There are at least a dozen major characters. He brings them in and out of the narrative with ease and agility. Gabi, who really functions as the hero of this novel, is complex, strange, very distasteful at certain times, but ultimately a man how is learning from his mistakes and is getting on with the business of life. Gavron also has an excellent handle of the baroque bureaucracies of the Israel government, and a very comic sense of things. All this gives the novel no little credit.
- Reviewed in the United States on September 20, 2018Fabulous writer and a great novel. This book has given me a very different view of Jews who establish and live in outpost settlements. The characters in this novel - the settlers, their Arab neighbors, the military, government officials, Americans passing through, are all just doing their best, they are human, understandable. The settlers lives are hard, they work hard and have very little in the way of material comforts. Tea, friends, family sustain them in a harsh land. It's not often that a novel changes my outlook, changes my view of a small piece of the world, but this one did. It is beautifully written with completely believable characters. The craziness and convolutions of the system for obtaining permits and registrations, allowances and approvals, is very funny (it's the DMV on steroids) and puts a human face on the very human desire for a place of one's own, on one's own terms, and the unique, sometimes comic, but always enlightening, way of making it happen in the Middle East. The Arab characters and their lives, their intersection with the settlers are as human and finely drawn and as understandable as the settlers. Everyone in this novel is just trying to get by. Start reading, you won't put it down.
- Reviewed in the United States on May 24, 2016Great topic but often boring.
- Reviewed in the United States on May 23, 2015I read this book specifically because our rabbi recommended it as very widely read in Israel and as a good possibility for a synagogue discussion. The book is an account of the lives of a group of miscellaneous Israeli settlers in, many of whom are misfits, who are populating a West Bank hilltop as part of an illegal settlement. They live in extremely reduced circumstances (erratic electricity, water, heat, etc.), and their lives are uncomfortable, to say the least. Most are orthodox, most want to unseat the Palestinian residents, but not all. They are under constant threat of having their settlement dismantled by the Israeli government and military. The two brothers who are the protagonists have led dramatically star-crossed lives. Although the settlement is partly on national park territory and partly on territory on land belonging to a Palestinian village, it's the Palestinians who represent the benign presence to the reader. The Israeli government and military agencies are presented as unpredictable, politicized and ineffectual. The book is at the same time amusing and also dark. To my surprise, because I am 100% anti-settlemen and because I see Israeli expansion in the West Bank as a true obstacle to peace in the region, I found the representations of the settlers relatively sympathetic. I attribute this to the skill of the author.
- Reviewed in the United States on July 11, 2015The issue of settlements in Israel is complex and few of us who haven't lived there can really understand it. Gavron's novel explains and entertains at the same time. The characters are complex- there is no hero. Gavron shows us the good and bad of all of the players in this intense political and historical struggle. Life on the settlement can be boring and petty but it is fueled by a sense of mission. He explains the political and bureaucratic environment that has given rise to the settlements in a way that is easy to understand. Gavrons writing style is fast paced and easy to follow but it is also sophisticated. Its a fast and compelling read and i learned something in the process. His books gives us insight into the Israeli culture and mindset in a way that is humorous and balanced. He seems to find flaws and beauty in all sectors of Israeli society.
- Reviewed in the United States on October 28, 2016This was a complex story from different persons points of view. It had much humor, explained the complexity of human experiences, gave a picture of the diversity of opinion and experience of the settle movement and the countries dilemma about it in Israel. People are complicated. It was well written and had marvelous descriptions of different persons' experiences of difficult moments in life.
I recommend it...you have to let yourself read until it pulls you into the complex situation it describes.
- Reviewed in the United States on November 6, 2015Very disorienting . Hard to follow.
Top reviews from other countries
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mary f.Reviewed in Brazil on December 7, 2019
3.0 out of 5 stars decepcionante, tinha potencial, mas foi muito aquém das resenhas internacionais
confesso que eu achei que esse livro ia dar uma enorme polêmica, mas ele bem raso se o objetivo foi mostrar os assentamentos como um lugar de gente no fim das contas tentando levar a vida. Ele até tenta fazer isso, e, em alguns momentos até consegue, mas no geral, as histórias são bem pouco aprofundadas com exceção da história de dois personagens, que aparecem em todas as partes do livro.
A obra em geral trata de uma ocupação ilegal perto de Jerusalém (de fato de um "anexo" de uma ocupação já antiga) ameaçada de despejo pelo governo de Israel, mas que por algumas razões (na minha opinião pouco exploradas) acaba sendo sempre postergada. Mostra a vida dessas pessoas principalmente do ponto de vista "interno" e pouco em relação aos Árabes , cujas vilas estão no entorno. Muito se fala sobre isso através dos personagens judeus; personagens árabes são poucos e quase desnecessários no encadeamento da narrativa. Uma pena, pois poderia ter sido um grande livro para tratar dessas questões de forma crítica, mas ele acaba por se posicionar de um lado do conflito apenas e isso enfraquece bastante a obra.
Como um plot "suplemnentar" , mas que ajuda a aprofundar na história dos dois protagonistas, temos um quase "bildungsroman" em que a história dos irmãos criados em um kibutz é bem trabalhada, até a chegada deles na ocupação, De fato é uma história à parte e bem interessante, mas que em larga medida não tem ligação com a trama principal, embora explique um pouco a relação dos doadores judeus da diáspora com o Estado de Israel. Mas infelizmente o autor acabou gastando várias páginas para falar de coisas totalmente irrelevantes para a trama , como a explicação um tanto demorada sobre o crack em 2008 que fez com que um dos irmãos perdesse toda a fortuna dele.
Por conta dessas partes do Kibutz , pouco espaço sobrou para os outros personagens da ocupação, o que poderia ter dado um pouco mais de realismo a trama. Alguns são bem caricaturais e estereotipados como a manicure extremista de direita e outros, cujas histórias são interessantes e poderiam ter tido mais atenção, não tiveram o aprofundamento necessário seja do ponto de vista empático do romance, seja para mostrar a complexidade do problema dos assentamentos. O final "feliz" também deixa a desejar e é cheio de estereótipos.
Achei uma pena, pois em alguns momentos se via o potencial que acabou não se concretizando, se perdendo em várias subtramas familiares que não foram devidamente exploradas embora tivessem potencial para isso.
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SamuelReviewed in France on January 16, 2017
5.0 out of 5 stars Un roman d'Israël
On dit que si l'on interroge dix Juifs on obtient onze opinions différentes. C'est ce que ce livre illustre: l'absurdité des confrontations d'aujourd'hui, alors que l'Histoire est longue et retient peu des individus qui l'ont faite. C'est aussi le roman d'un établissement agricole dans les collines de Judée entouré d'hostilité. Et enfin le roman de deux frères inoubliables typiques de la jeunesse formée par le kibboutz et l'armée.
- Avid readerReviewed in the United Kingdom on October 24, 2015
5.0 out of 5 stars A nuanced look into an everyday headline
Fantastic insight into the realities of the 'settlers' in Israel and their complex lives
- NSJMReviewed in the United Kingdom on July 7, 2016
4.0 out of 5 stars Enjoyable, entertaining.
Entertaining and insightful easy read. Drags on a bit at the end, and you do need some insight into the local behaviours and cultures to fully appreciate.
- megReviewed in the United Kingdom on May 16, 2016
3.0 out of 5 stars Three Stars
Interesting insight into life in a kibbutz