Author:Amos Oz

Unto Death contains two beautiful short novels linked by death and destruction.
Crusade is set in 1096 - a year of sinister omens. Count Guillaume of Touron sets out on a crusade to Jerusalem and on the way he serves his God by killing any Jews he meets. But will the Count find the peace of mind he seeks when he faces the terrible realities of war in the Holy Land?
In Late Love Oz portrays an elderly professor living alone in Tel Aviv, a man neither loving nor loved. His last mission is to expose the plight of his fellow Russian Jews and alert the people of Israel to the conspiracy that threatens them. But nobody wants to listen...
Two beautiful short novels
—— TimesThere is, in his ferocious evocations of suffering and disintegration, realism and insight
—— Times Literary SupplementOutstanding
—— Financial TimesAfter almost two dozen books that track changes in both heart and state with untiring strength and subtlety, the Israeli master has delivered one of the boldest of all his works… Nicholas de Lange, Oz’s distinguished translator, steers these virtuoso transitions between debate and domesticity with unerring skill… Oz can imagine, and inhabit, treachery of every stripe. But he keeps faith with the art of fiction.
—— Boyd Tonkin , Financial TimesA big, beautiful novel… Funny, wise and provoking.
—— Kate Saunders , The Timeschallenging, complex and strangely compelling… The ideas at the novel’s centre have great vitality and force. The philosophical passages bristle with linguistic energy, scriptural references and dense detail, vividly conveyed in Nicholas de Lange’s translation.
—— Eva Hoffman , SpectatorIt is rich in material to grapple with. Oz engages with urgent questions while retaining his right as a novelist to fight shy of answers: it’s a mark of his achievement that the result isn’t frustrating but tantalising.
—— Anthony Cummins , Daily TelegraphA masterpiece: command of the word, mastery of construct, the ability to stimulate all the senses of the reader.
Judas is a rich and thrilling novel, one of the most interesting books published this year.
—— HaaretzAmos Oz belongs to the great authors of world literature
Judas is a great novel that only Oz could have written…perhaps his finest work.
—— StandpointUtterly spellbinding ... an especially urgent and profoundly universal work ...Judas is a stately but thoroughly entertaining work, brimming with intricate storylines and characters who are brilliantly alive and get under one's skin.
Oz has written one of the most triumphant novels of his career
Judas is deeply humane, touching and loving. Incredible literature
—— TROUWOnce again, Amos Oz has given us an absolute, necessary masterpiece
—— Alberto ManguelHe’ll no doubt be overlooked for the Nobel Prize yet again next month – this novel shows just how ludicrous that is.
—— Hephzibah Anderson , Mail on Sunday[Judas is] quietly provocative… Aided by Nicholas de Lange’s lucid translation from the Hebrew, it challenges you to think afresh about stories and histories whose interpretations can seem chiseled in stone.
—— Wall Street Journal (Europe)A heart-breaking meditation on roads not taken, and collisions yet to come.
—— Clive Sinclair , Times Literary Supplement, Book of the YearIt is a tribute to the author’s gifts (and to those of his long-time translator Nicholas de Lange) that the novel is so fluid and evocative, at once intellectually stimulating and brimming with humanity… [Oz’s] empathy for human weakness, which has always marked his writing, saturates this extraordinary, rich novel.
—— Natasha Lehrer , Times Literary SupplementJudas deepens the reader’s understanding of conflicts that arguably seem more irresolvable today than they did in 1960… In Lange’s lively translation, the sense of place and period is powerful.
—— Max Liu , iOz has written so well for so long, the craft shows. Judas reads quickly, and gracefully, without a superfluous page.
—— Ben Judah , ProspectVintage Oz, very atmospheric, and heavy on authentic detail… Enjoy reading the book, and then enjoy peeling back the layers.
—— Max Blackston , Birmingham Jewish RecordRegarded as a potential Nobel laureate… Oz is always worth heeding. It is an important work and as ever Oz’s translator Nicholas de Lange attends to the power, intensity and nuance Oz brings to every idea.
—— Eileen Battersby , Irish TimesJudas is yet another accomplished work by a master comfortable in his game… accessibly profound as well as deeply thought-provoking. A must for anyone interested in Christianity, politics, and the meaning of friendship. Otherwise, Judas is a great way to meet one of the most important writers in the 21st century at his best.
—— Yoojung Chun , Oxford StudentA novel that grapples with mankind’s most indelible anxieties, from the nature of damnation to the smaller but no less urgent details of tea-making, Judas is an intelligent and hypnotic novel.
—— Brad Davies , IndependentAll We Shall Know blew me away, left me blubbering on my commute and wide awake at 2 a.m. . . . He excels at first-person narrative, and it's this that makes All We Shall Know unforgettable.
—— Stylist magazineAn intense, dramatic story . . . rather touching.
—— Mail on SundayHis best yet . . . I kept re-reading paragraphs and whole pages to savour Ryan's remarkable prose. The book imbues profanity with poetry, and the characters, for all their flaws, are beautifully and sympathetically drawn.
—— Hot PressUnflinching.
—— Radio TimesA wonderful novel.
—— S MagazineIn a word, this book is stunning.
—— The BooksellerA beautiful, heart-rending novel of quiet, understated tragedy… Sensitive and insightful, heart-breaking and hopeful… [A] tender, wise and hopeful novel.
—— Hannah Beckerman , ObserverBoth novels offer precision of language and metaphor and scene even as what is being constructed feels messy, chaotic, sad, hopeless... Both orphaned and alone in the world, both so completely real, both telling a story that feels important and exciting to read. I feel lucky to have stumbled upon these books this year, and challenged by them to be better
—— The MillionsThis debut novel by acclaimed short story writer van den Berg tends to lean much closer to the realms of literary fiction with its complex psychology. . . Van den Berg's writing is curiously beautiful
—— Kirkusa strange beauty in this apocalyptic tale
—— PsychologiesCharming, magical, mysterious, enthralling
—— Daily MirrorLushly imagined, extremely charming and very, very readable
—— Scotland on SundayThe Night Circus made me happy. Playful and intensely imaginative, Erin Morgenstern has created the circus I have always longed for. This is a marvelous book
—— Audrey Niffenegger, author of The Time Traveler's WifeThe Night Circus pulls you into a world as dark as it is dazzling, fully-realized but still something out of a dream. You will not want to leave it
—— Téa Obreht, author of The Tiger’s WifePure pleasure... Erin Morgenstern is a gifted, classic storyteller, a tale-teller, a spinner of the charmed and mesmerizing - I had many other things I was supposed to be doing, but the book kept drawing me back in and I tore through it. You can be certain this riveting debut will create a group of rêveurs all its own
—— Aimee Bender, author of The Particular Sadness of Lemon CakeThis 19th-Century Anglo-American costume drama about two star-crossed lovers in a fantastical travelling circus is as dreamlike and magical as its setting
—— GuardianI'm not often lost for words, but I'm struggling to find the words to describe just how good this book is and how it made me feel, so I'll just say this: if you are only able to read one book for the rest of your life, make sure it is The Night Circus. You won't regret it
—— The Book BagThis must be one of the most beautiful novels of the year. Its die-cut cover, black-edged pages and intricate endpapers attest to the publisher's hopes that Erin Morgenstern's magically minded debut will secure the vast audience left bereft by the conclusion of the Harry Potter chronicles
—— ObserverThe narrative is deft and satisfying, and the author's talent is intriguing
—— Times Literary SupplementEnchanting, and affecting... I was compelled by the world itself - by its saturated colours and textures, its unexpected smells and tastes. It is a surprisingly rare thing in fiction - a strikingly beautiful world, in spite of its darkness
—— Claire Messud , GuardianMorgenstern's writing, when it comes to magical creations, is delectable, addictive stuff...[it] leaves a tang of smoky caramel in the air as it ends, and an undeniable urge to go to the circus
—— Sunday TimesA beguiling, gripping read... Morgenstern has crafted a thrilling and transporting tale
—— The EconomistExtraordinary, atmospheric, a mind-spinning story
—— Woman & HomeThis week's hot read...I loved this book and didn't want it to end... Totally absorbing and beautifully descriptive, it created a whole world I couldn't help but get lost in, especially the slow-burning love story between the two main characters, who are both sorcerers
—— Deborah Hughes , Woman MagazineEnter the magical world of a mysterious travelling circus
—— HeatThe new One Day... Erin Morgenstern is the talk of the literary world and we hear The Night Circus will be the next big thing. Set in a mysterious, monochrome circus the book centres on two young magicians who begin to fall in love
—— Claire Williams , EssentialsFantasy blends seamlessly with reality and I ended up having to use words like this: enchanting
—— Kate Saunders , Saga MagazineErin Morgenstern's astonishingly vivid imagination made the unbelievable believable...in other words I fell for it all... There is illusion and delusion, shape-shifting, manipulation and deceit, misdirection and more often than not all is definitely not what it seems as the story unfolds, and if you are as unforgiving as I am of entire books written in the present tense, in this case, as you read you will see why it is necessary. The present tense embraces shifting time whether past or future, it is actually always the present ..see I can hardly make sense of it myself, you need to read it to see how well it works. And yes, I was enchanted, and I did run away with the circus as young Bailey does, and as I closed the book of course I came back to reality gently wondering whether I was supposed to be thinking, how long before Bailey meets Mr Barnum
—— DovegreyreaderAn enchanting tale of forbidden love, set against the spectacular backdrop of the circus
—— Press AssociationA recommendation by Audrey Niffenegger...should ensure this amazing debut novel gets the attention it deserves
—— Viv Groskop , VoyagerFantasy lovers, here comes Harry Potter for grown-ups... The story is already en-route to Hollywoood so snap up the original tale first
—— Claire Rees , WMIt is rich, evocative, compelling, enchanting, whimsical, breath-taking, playful, imaginative, marvellous, and quite simply beautiful in every single way. I love it
—— Emily Hirschmann , Pocketful of RyeRich in Shakespearean allusion, this is McEwan on dazzling form.
—— Mail on SundayTold from a perspective unlike any other, Nutshell is a classic tale of murder and deceit from one of the world’s master storytellers.
—— SilversurfersIan McEwan’s brilliance as a stylist and surprise plotter finds a fitting subject in Nutshell…, which is Hamlet as told from inside the womb. Up there with his best.
—— Melvyn Bragg , New StatesmanA gripping tale is told with breathtaking skill, turbocharged with rage against the madness and despair of our modern world.
—— Guto Harri , The TabletNutshell is one of those books you sit down to read and don’t get up until you’ve finished. It is brilliantly executed and full of surprises; original, clever and witty. Simply a must-read
—— Kalwant Bhopal , Times Higher EducationA book I couldn’t put down… brilliantly clever
—— Nadav Kander , Observer






