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Etgar Keret
The Nimrod Flip Out: Stories
Farrar, Straus, and Giroux
On the surface, these stories have a mordant, chatty humor. One story's title says it all: "Actually, I've Had Some Phenomenal Hard-Ons Lately." But tragedy lurks not far below. The title story starts out in typical Keret territory: Some Israeli friends (all vets) goofing around Sinai experience a haunting by their friend Nimrod, a suicide. Things turn to black comedy when the narrator muses about leaving his buddy Miron alone with Nimrod, to which Miron says, with a hint of desperation, "Good thing you're ugly."
Normally, writers who break structural boundaries as Keret does, like the triple-named heroic duo of David Foster Wallace and Jonathan Safran Foer, do so with excess, piling on the references, asides, footnotes, standup comedy routines, and metafictional tangents until one just surrenders. By contrast, Keret's fiction is thinly packed and calmly paced, gobsmacking the reader when she least expects it. He uses one word when five will do.