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Don't Call It Night
Don't Call It Night
Nov 5, 2025 2:07 AM

Author:Amos Oz

Don't Call It Night

In the summer of 1989, at Tel-Kedar, a small settlement in the Negev Desert, the long time love affair between Theo, a sixty-year-old civil engineer, and Noa, a much younger school teacher, is slowly disintegrating. When a pupil of Noa's dies under difficult circumstances, the couple and the entire town are thrown into turmoil.

With characteristic subtlety and brilliance, Amos Oz tells a wry and tender story of frustrated ambition and love which is never quite fulfilled - bringing together stormy intrigue in a small community with gentle humour and an intimate anatomy of a relationship.

Reviews

Oz's sense of place brings Faulkner to mind. His quest for ideals is Tolstoyan, his hapless, decaying characters evoke thoughts of Bellow, but their intensity of feeling, their obsession with elementary issues is Dostoevskian

—— Sunday Telegraph

A commanding artist who ranks with the most important writers of our time

—— Cynthia Ozick

Oz has imposed order on a literary landscape that, at least to his overseas readers, seethes with conflict

—— Guardian

An elegiac, exquisite portrait of a middle-aged love affair

—— Independent

A franchise set to eclipse Harry Potter and moody vampires

—— Big Issue

A charming, quirky tale

—— Woman & Home

A charming read

—— Prima

If you're looking for a book to take you by surprise, Salley Vickers' latest is the perfect choice

—— Psychologies

A carefully considered, micro-detailed examination of a modern America ... Victor is a compelling, multi-layered character.

—— SFX Magazine

Underground Airlines is bold, brilliant, and beautiful -- everything you could want from a novel, Ben Winters delivers ten-fold. He's a writer to watch, one of exceptional vision and imagination whose characters draw the reader in to the point that an alternate history seems not only plausible, but the only one that counts until the final page.

—— Michael Koryta, New York Times bestselling author of Those Who Wish Me Dead

Smart, quick and tricky, Ben Winters knows how to pull off a high-concept thriller. Fans of The Man in the High Castle will love Underground Airlines.

—— Stewart O' Nan

Underground Airlines is like nothing I have ever read before. I know it will be a pivot point in my reading life.
Thought you’d wrestled sufficiently with the stain of Slavery? Have a seat. You’ll only need the edge.
By spinning a pounding thriller in a past that did not happen, Winters has somehow wrapped his hands around the catastrophe that did. This is how it might have been, I kept thinking, if history had gone that way. But the moral shock at the heart of the book: Winters’s rabbit hole is not strange enough, the gulf between that and this is not wide enough. Underground Airlines does what all great speculative fiction wants to do – show the reader that Everything is possible. That’s the good news and bad. The novel's many-named narrator descends from Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man – his voice is mesmeric, it comes from any corner, it can boil with savagery, sing with grace or do pretty much anything in between. Oh, and he descends from Jason Bourne as well; he has mad field skills. So does Winters. You’re set down in motion on a tilted mirror and then it’s turn after gripping turn – my every next hour depended on which way he went.

—— David Shafer, National Bestselling author of Whiskey Tango Foxtrot

Brilliantly written, terrifyingly conceived, Underground Airlines had me from the first page to the last. Many writers might have been content to set a few characters loose in the middle of the kind of powerful premise — slavery in four states never ended —put to work here, but Winters gives us gripping plot, clear-eyed social commentary and chilling implications. This may be alternate history, but what it has to say about actual, enduring race and racism cuts awfully close to the 21st century American bone.

—— Laird Hunt, author of Neverhome

In this alternative history, President Abraham Lincoln is assassinated en route to his inauguration. His death leads legislators to come together with one last proposal to keep the Union intact. It works, and today the status of slavery is decided state by state. In the Hard Four states, “peebs” (Persons Bound to Labor) are legally enchained, working 12 hours on and eight off. If a peeb escapes, the federal government is enjoined to find and return him to his owners. Victor works undercover for the U.S. Marshals, tracking down other black men. Now he’s hunting a peeb named Jackdaw. Something’s wrong, though, and he can’t figure out what. Fast paced and filled with menace, the story has an ambience that makes it special. In Victor’s supposedly “free” world, everywhere there are traps for people of color—free doesn’t mean equal and definitely doesn’t mean safe. What’s startling is that Victor’s experiences could well happen in the contemporary world. VERDICT Explosive, well plotted, and impossible to put down, this alt-hist by the Edgar Award–winning author of the “Last Policeman” trilogy will attract readers of all genres.

—— Library Journal

Ralph Ellison's The Invisible Man meets Blade Runner in this outstanding alternate history thriller.

—— Publishers Weekly

The world of Underground Airlines is realised in incredible details, fascinating to read even when it’s truly uncomfortable … It’s frightening how plausible and believable Ben H. Winters’ alternate reality America really is.

—— Alternative Magazine Online

A terrific premise … the haunting scenes of slavery in the Hard Four will stay with you.

—— Herald Scotland

Underground Airlines is a powerful work … a brave, controversial thriller.

—— Crime Fiction Lover

A great premise … but slavery scenes will haunt you.

—— WEstern Daily Press

An almost painfully timely novel.

—— Sci-Fi Now

Winters does an amazing job of painting a world that never was but, in his hands, is frighteningly plausible … Winters has crafted a thrilling, tightly plotted and nourish thriller.

—— Independent

If you’re looking for a brilliant, smart, chilling page turner for what’s left of the summer, I can recommend Ben H. Winters.

—— Daily Mirror

Winters does an amazing job of painting a world that next we was, but in his hands, are frighteningly plausible … Winters could not have written a more timely novel.

—— Belfast Telegraph

Groundbreaking.

—— Pride Magazine

A really intriguing premise.

—— Anna's Reading List

On the surface, Underground Airlines is a well-crafted thriller, suspenseful and with fascinating characters. But not far below the surface is a philosophical debate about how one small change of events in history can put the world on a different path.

—— Mystery People

‘Intriguing’

—— SFX

There is more than one idiot in this delightful and slyly funny coming-of-age novel... Will strike a chord for any former fresher who felt the same way. (That would be all of us.)

—— Sarra Manning , Red

Batuman, in seemingly writing a novel about nothing, has produced an incredibly complex, accurate and funny novel.

—— Rachael Revesz , Independent

I never want to finish it, so I’m reading it very slowly.

—— Lauren Waterman , ELLE

Every page is thicketed with jokes, riffs, theories of language. It’s a portrait of an intellectual and sentimental education that offers almost unseemly pleasure.

—— Parhul Sehgal , New York Times

Elif Batuman is a real writer, and should be allowed to write whatever the hell she likes.

—— Daniel Soar , London Review of Books

Selin’s deadpan narration is often very funny indeed

—— Leaf Arbuthnot , Sunday Times

This is a capacious book that creates an alternative world

—— Lara Feigel , Guardian

At once clever and clueless, Batuman’s heroine shows us with just how messy it can be to forge a self

—— London Property South

One of the best novels I read all summer... a painstakingly accurate depiction of the balancing act that is student-life. As clever as it is funny, Batuman's debut novel allows us to laugh at our own stupidity, and celebrate our own cluelessness.

—— Varsity

The Idiot... manages the trick of being laugh-out-loud funny while not actually being a comedy. It just observers life, in all its truth and is hilarious for page after page.

—— Patrick Ness , Guardian

I finally read The Idiot by Elif Batuman and everyone is correct, she is clearly a genius

—— White Review, *Books of the Year*
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