Monday, December 16, 2019

Virtual Book Tour + #Giveaway: A Greek Cat by Moshe Karasso @RABTBookTours


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Novel, life story
Date Published: September 18, 2019

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“A Greek Cat,” by Moshe Karasso, artfully unfurls the incredible story of the son of a once wealthy, now impoverished Jewish family living on one of the Greek Islands.

In a spectacular feat of juggling, time is diverted forwards and backwards, between childhood and old age, presenting readers with a wide spectrum of events, people, and island vistas.

Karasso offers readers a glimpse into the lives of fishermen and their families, and, later in the novel, into the everyday culture of German Nazis both inside and outside their homes. All of these are recounted in the first person by a remarkably resourceful narrator who eventually loses his sanity.

Looking at this book in the broader context of Existentialist literature, one cannot help but compare it with the works of French writer Albert Camus, whose grasp of the absurdity of existence liberates man from the hope of a perfect human morality that demands life at any cost.

From Moshe Karasso 

Born in Istanbul, Turkey in 1933. Married with three children. Lives in the Tel Aviv area of Israel.

Writes primarily essays and poems.

This is his first work of fiction.


The book is not an autobiography (although written in first person), but is influenced by the life of the Greek Islands (where my father was born), the historical events of the Second World War, and the fate of the Jews during this period.

Hundreds of years ago, I believed that people who were born in a particular country, who lived there and died there, were fundamentally different from people who lived in a different land. Now I know that the progressions of events that I’ve seen in my life could have taken place anywhere on the entire planet. Cruelty and kindness are interwoven, like the hibernation of forest bears, from the day we came into the world. Laughter and suffering, the ridiculous and the sublime, serve only as a screen for the storm of a clown’s feelings as he entertains others against his will.


Synopsis

“A Greek Cat” is the narrative of a native of one of the Greek Islands, who transcribes his experiences from birth through old age.

The narrator was born to a Jewish family whose connection to Judaism is tenuous.

The happiness of his childhood is cut short when his father walks out on them and, later, his mother dies, and he is left tormented and alone.

After leaving the island, he goes to Salonika, where his five bachelor uncles have been granted custody of the boy.

With the German occupation of Greece, he escapes to Crete and joins the British army. After the surrender of his battalion, he is transferred to an industrial work camp. He is saved from the bitter destiny of a starved and exploited slave when his employer brings him to his farm, where he carries out any necessary tasks. He finds himself torn between hatred and appreciation: “I was disoriented, lost between hatred and gratitude towards these people. Now, I would have to redouble my efforts to hate them.”

His good fortune works against him when, after the war, he is suspected of collaborating with the enemy. After a series of adventures, some of which put his life at risk, he eventually arrives in Israel.
In his old age and his last years, he loses his sanity.

I hope you enjoy the book.

Mosh Karasso


About the Author

 photo Moshe karasso_zpsaujgwxnl.jpg
Born in Istanbul, Turkey in 1933. Married with three children. Lives in the Tel Aviv area of Israel.
Writes primarily essays and poems.
This is his first work of fiction.




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1 comments:

Anonymous said...

Thanks for hosting