Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
#telaviv
quote
charl08

Remember what I read to you in the first class, that excerpt from Kafka's letter?" Michael closed his eyes and quoted from memory: " "I think we ought to read only the kind of books that wound or stab us. If he book we're reading doesn't wake us up with a blow to the head, what are we reading it for? "

humouress (deleting a comment that should have gone to my book - sorry!) (edited) 5mo
charl08 @humouress ?? 😀 5mo
humouress @charl08 🫨Oops, I wondered where that comment went. I thought I added it to my book and then it didn‘t show up. Must be a glitch. I‘ll delete it now 5mo
26 likes4 comments
review
Arvena
Three Floors Up | Eshkol Nevo
post image
Mehso-so

Evocatively and calculatingly told, the writing in here is sublime. Slow-revealing storylines were interesting, but too many questions were left unanswered...

review
IuliaC
Three Floors Up | Eshkol Nevo
post image
Pickpick

Three families live in an elegant residential building. One member in each makes a heart-wrenching confession and paints a vivid and diverse image of Israeli society. I was most touched by the third story, so poignant and heartbreaking.

"The three floors of the psyche do not exist inside us at all! Absolutely not! They exist in the air between us and someone else, in the space between our mouths and the ears we are telling our story to."

63 likes1 stack add
blurb
Graywacke
post image

#Alphabetgame #LetterW @Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks

I fell under the spell of this novel, an odd romance in a British controlled pre-Israel full of WW2 refugees, cultural mixtures, and all the conflicting unsettled forces.

Other special W‘s:
Ward Six and Other Stories-Anton Chekhov
The Warmth of Other Suns-Isabel Wilkerson
We Have Always Lived in the Castle-Shirley Jackson
Woman of Rome: A Life of Elsa Morante-Lily Tuck

Kitta I almost picked this one too! I loved it. 2y
Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks Thanks for playing 🙌🏻📚 2y
Graywacke @Kitta 👍 I always feel like it‘s a book that should get more attention than it does. 🙂 2y
46 likes4 comments
blurb
xicanti
Exit Wounds | Rutu Modan
post image

Casey helped me read a comic from my Litsy stack before bed last night. I‘m gonna have to seek out Rutu Modan‘s short comics now, because this was very well done. I also really appreciated the interview at the end for the insight it gave me into the Israeli comics scene.

MemoirsForMe That sweet face! 🐶❤️ 2y
tpixie Casey is an adorable reading buddy! 💚🐶💚 (edited) 2y
Graywacke Terrific gn. I like her a lot. 2y
xicanti @Graywacke I‘m excited to read more from her. 2y
41 likes4 comments
review
Lindy
Exit Wounds | Rutu Modan
post image
Pickpick

I loved this just as much upon rereading as I did 15 years ago when the English translation (from Hebrew by Noah Stollman) first came out. It‘s been so long that I didn‘t even remember what happened… That‘s a bonus! Because it‘s a pageturner with surprises, about ordinary people in Tel Aviv. Nuanced character development, all the feels, & absolutely gorgeous clear-line artwork, similar to the style in Tintin comics.

30 likes2 stack adds
quote
Lindy
Exit Wounds | Rutu Modan
post image

If she hadn‘t died at fifty, she might have lived to be a hundred.

Patchshank Ha! Live forever or die trying. 3y
27 likes1 stack add2 comments
blurb
SqueakyChu
Accidents: A Novel | Yael Hedaya
post image

I just came across this book which I received from a member of #LibraryThing over ten years ago! I thought it was about time to read it so I began it today for a LibraryThing challenge to read a book by an #Israeli or Palestinian author.

8 likes1 stack add
review
Kelly_the_Bookish_Sidekick
Three Floors Up | Eshkol Nevo
post image
Pickpick

A light pick. This book is comprised of three stories, each following a family on different floors of an apartment building in Tel Aviv. They are told almost like confessionals, with a resident from each apartment sharing their story to "you", a friend, a confidant, or a deceased husband. Like you, these confidants don't interact or reply and they feel a bit contrived.

Story one showed a family with two children and how they all interacted⬇️

Kelly_the_Bookish_Sidekick with the older couple across the hall. As things come to a head and Arnon obsesses about his daughter's safety, he makes decisions that affect his family. This one got uncomfortable for some events involving underage girls.

Story three involves Devorah, a judge who recently lost her husband. She tells her story as rambling voicemail messages to him as she deals with loss, new friendship, and longing for an estranged son. ⬇️
4y
Kelly_the_Bookish_Sidekick Story 2 was my favorite, as it felt the most relatable. Hani is a wife & mother to 2 young children & she is feeling lonely. Her husband isn't an active caregiver & travels often for work, leaving Hani on the parenting island alone. One day her brother-in-law appears on the doorstep, on the run and in need of her help. With the brothers in a rift & her husband away, Hani is game to help. This is the most excitement she's had in a long time. ⬇️ 4y
Kelly_the_Bookish_Sidekick These stories didn't give me a good sense of place of Tel Aviv, as so much revolves around the apartment building and their secular, personal lives, but it was an interesting way to spend a few hours.

Final April book (finally) #BookspinBingo @TheAromaofBooks and my third finished for #foodandlit #israel @Butterfinger @Texreader @Catsandbooks
4y
TheAromaofBooks Yay!!! 4y
50 likes1 stack add4 comments