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Hilde Pach

    Goede mensen
    Judas
    Krokodil van de aanslagen
    The Book of Intimate Grammar
    A Tale of Love and Darkness
    • A Tale of Love and Darkness

      • 517 pages
      • 19 hours of reading

      Tragic, comic and incomparable: an autobiographical epic and a comedie humaine for our times, which is both the portrait of an artist and the story of the birth of a nation, spanning several generations and moving with them from Russia, Lithuania, the Ukraine, to Jerusalem. Love and darkness are just two of the powerful forces that run through Amos Oz's extraordinary, moving story. He takes us on a seductive journey through his childhood and adolescence, along Jerusalem's wartorn streets in the 1940s and '50s, and into the infernal marriage of two kind, well-meaning people: his fussy, logical father, and his dreamy, romantic mother. Caught between them is one small boy with the weight of generations on his shoulders. And at the tragic heart of the story is the suicide of his mother, when Amos was twelve-and-a-half years old. Oz's story dives into 120 year of family history and paradox, the saga of a Jewish love-hate affair with Europe that sweeps from Vilna and Odessa, via Poland and Prague, to Israel. Farce and heartbreak, history and humanity make up this magical portrait of the artist who saw the birth of a nation, and came through its turbulent life as well as his own. over.

      A Tale of Love and Darkness
      4.3
    • The Book of Intimate Grammar

      • 352 pages
      • 13 hours of reading

      Hurled between childhood and adulthood, between the pure and the profane, he is like a volcano of emotions and impulses. But, like his hero Houdini, Aron still struggles to escape from the trap of growing up.

      The Book of Intimate Grammar
      4.0
    • Krokodil van de aanslagen

      • 303 pages
      • 11 hours of reading

      Politically incorrect, provocative, and steeped in wit and irony, a fast-paced tragicomedy about the perfectly ordinary madness in today's Middle East A thirtysomething Tel Aviv businessman, Eitan "Croc" Einoch's life is turned upside down when he narrowly escapes a suicide bombing on the minibus he rides to work. When he lives through a second attack, and then a third, he becomes, reluctantly, a national media celebrity. Naturally, the Palestinian terrorists responsible for the attacks are less than happy. This embarrassing symbol of their failure--this "CrocAttack"--must be neutralized. Meanwhile, Fahmi Sabih lies in a coma, quarrelling with his conscience. The young Palestinian suicide bomber has learned everything he knows about bombs, targets, and revenge from his brother. So why has Einoch survived? As Fahmi's story unfolds, it becomes clear that their paths are destined to cross again--for there is another bombing still to come--and then luck will change drastically for one or both of them. But who, if anyone, has right on his side?

      Krokodil van de aanslagen
      3.7
    • Judas

      A Novel

      • 305 pages
      • 11 hours of reading

      Winner of the International Literature Prize, the new novel by Amos Oz is his first full-length work since the best-selling A Tale of Love and Darkness. Jerusalem, 1959. Shmuel Ash, a biblical scholar, is adrift in his young life when he finds work as a caregiver for a brilliant but cantankerous old man named Gershom Wald. There is, however, a third, mysterious presence in his new home. Atalia Abarbanel, the daughter of a deceased Zionist leader, a beautiful woman in her forties, entrances young Shmuel even as she keeps him at a distance. Piece by piece, the old Jerusalem stone house, haunted by tragic history and now home to the three misfits and their intricate relationship, reveals its secrets. At once an exquisite love story and coming-of-age novel, an allegory for the state of Israel and for the biblical tale from which it draws its title, Judas is Amos Oz's most powerful novel in decades.

      Judas
      3.7
    • Goede mensen

      • 608 pages
      • 22 hours of reading

      Thomas Heiselberg, een briljante en ambitieuze marktonderzoeker, zet in Berlijn van de jaren dertig alles op het spel om succesvol te worden. Een nieuw bewind is aan de macht in Duitsland en Thomas beseft dat hij zijn specifieke talenten moet inzetten om te overleven in het Derde Rijk. Op datzelfde moment staat in Leningrad de jonge, joodse Aleksandra Vajsberg voor een onmenselijke keuze. Haar ouders zijn door de communistische machthebbers bestempeld als 'vijanden van het volk' en zijn hun leven niet meer zeker. Om haar broertjes dat lot te besparen is Aleksandra gedwongen samen te werken met het regime dat haar familie bedreigt. Aan de vooravond van de oorlog tussen Duitsland en Rusland denken Thomas en Aleksandra allebei dat ze een persoonlijke keuze maken, maar de gevolgen ervan zijn groter dan ze ooit hadden voorzien.

      Goede mensen
      3.4