
Mitla Pass
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Narrado por:
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Angela Dawe
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David de Vries
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De:
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Leon Uris
Gideon Zadok arrives in Israel with every intention to research a new book, mend a broken marriage, and improve his dysfunctional family. But as political tensions escalate and his family is evacuated, Zadok asks to follow Israeli paratroopers to secure Mitla Pass and finds himself in the midst of one of the largest global crises of the twentieth century. A sweeping novel of love, passion, and freedom, Mitla Pass stands as an epic look at modern Middle Eastern history and is quite possibly Uris’s most autobiographical work.
From Library Journal:
Against the backdrop of the 1956 Sinai War, Uris provides a riveting portrait (possibly autobiographical) of a man caught in personal crisis. Gideon Zadok, best-selling novelist and successful Hollywood screenwriter, has come to Israel with his family to research a new novel and to shore up a crumbling marriage. But he jeopardizes that by starting a passionate affair with a beautiful Auschwitz survivor. Zadok is a man wavering on the edge of a breakdown. As the political crisis escalates, and his family is evacuated, Zadok asks to accompany Israeli paratroopers on a desperate mission to seal off the strategic Mitla Pass. The Uris name will make this book much in demand, and if it is not as much of an epic as Exodus or Trinity, it has in Zadok Uris’s most fascinating character.
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Stars tell the story of my review
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Uris loves storytelling but weaves in so many characters, so many eras, and so much angst, we’re never sure what to focus on. He seems to believe we need to meet every important person and even the insignificant people who ever had an iota of influence in the life of his protagonist. The problem is he gets us interested in all these people once we suffer through the tedium of why they’re there, and we get attached, and then, bam, we’re zapped somewhere else with a new set of relatives or others to care about.
A few major characters stood out and we want more—Abby the teacher who loved him, and Val, who loved him enough to look beyond his demons. We think she was a “glutton for punishment.”
The narration is stellar and in many ways elevated the story.
It will be a while before we wade through another Uris saga. This one could have used a little more depth and less hackneyed psycho drama.
Moments of brilliance, many minutes of tedium
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Loved Loved Loved
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Not like any Leon Uris I have read
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Multi generational story told with beauty, tragedy, and hope.
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I can’t stand it anymore
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Not Uris’ Best
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What is this?
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Sad book for such a great author
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