A.B. Yehoshua
Born
in Jerusalem, Israel
December 19, 1936
Died
June 14, 2022
Genre
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The Lover (Love & War Trilogy, #1)
by
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published
1977
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4 editions
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A Woman in Jerusalem
by
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published
2004
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3 editions
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Mr. Mani
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published
1989
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2 editions
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The Tunnel
by
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published
2018
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10 editions
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A Journey to the End of the Millennium
by
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published
1996
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40 editions
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The Liberated Bride: A Brilliant Literary Comedy Where History, Marriage, and Arab-Israeli Lives Collide
by
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published
1983
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2 editions
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The Only Daughter
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published
2021
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2 editions
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A Late Divorce (Love & War Trilogy, #2)
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published
1982
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33 editions
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The Extra
by
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published
2014
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6 editions
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Friendly Fire
by
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published
2007
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4 editions
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“And this is one of the major questions of our lives: how we keep boundaries, what permission we have to cross boundaries, and how we do so.” A.B. Yehoshua”
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“Yet in recent years I have witnessed a new phenomenon among filmgoers, especially those considered intelligent and perceptive. I have a name for this phenomenon: the Instant White-out. People are closeted in cozy darkness; they turn off their mobile phones and willingly give themselves, for ninety minutes or two hours, to a new film that got a fourstar rating in the newspaper. They follow the pictures and the plot, understand what is spoken either in the original tongue or via dubbing or subtitles, enjoy lush locations and clever scenes, and even if they find the story superficial or preposterous, it is not enough to pry them from their seats and make them leave the theatre in the middle of the show.
But something strange happens. After a short while, a week or two, sometimes even less, the film is whitened out, erased, as if it never happened. They can’t remember its name, or who the actors were, or the plot. The movie fades into the darkness of the movie house, and what remains is at most a ticket stub left accidentally in one’s pocket.”
― The Retrospective
But something strange happens. After a short while, a week or two, sometimes even less, the film is whitened out, erased, as if it never happened. They can’t remember its name, or who the actors were, or the plot. The movie fades into the darkness of the movie house, and what remains is at most a ticket stub left accidentally in one’s pocket.”
― The Retrospective
“But it’s not consolation she wants. On the contrary, she is looking for precise words, forgotten facts - or maybe new ones - that will inflame her pain and grief over he big sister, whose death had claimed a portion of her own youth. Yes, she has a clear desire to breathe life into her loss and crack open the crust of forgetfulness that has begun to envelop her.”
― Friendly Fire
― Friendly Fire
Polls
Topics Mentioning This Author
| topics | posts | views | last activity | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| The Lost Challenges: Quarterly Back to School Challenge | 101 | 133 | Nov 21, 2012 02:13PM | |
| Crazy Challenge C...: A-Z Author Challenge - 2012 | 294 | 264 | Jan 17, 2013 02:56PM | |
| You'll love this ...: Shannon from NY's High Octane Alphabet | 35 | 85 | Mar 21, 2013 08:32AM | |
| Crazy Challenge C...: Summer Spell Challenge - 2012 | 291 | 145 | Apr 13, 2013 07:25PM |































