Amos Oz
-
Ahead of the launch of his new book Nutshell, Ian McEwan joined Mark Lawson for a Guardian Live event. What did some of our members think?
-
A remarkably successful synergy between Victorian Opera and Circus Oz toes the line between sincerity and silliness – and yes, elicits both laughter and tears
-
The books interview: The acclaimed Israeli novelist on the political role of the writer and why it is time to rethink the two-state solution
-
Banned books, fines for theatre groups, playlists for radios, funding axed for ‘disloyal’ art … do Israel’s artists feel under attack from culture minister, and ex-brigadier-general, Miri Regev?
-
Im Tirtzu billboards calling critics of Israeli state ‘leftwing moles’ denounced by cultural and political leaders as reminiscent of US witch-hunt
-
Israel’s education ministry triggers kissing protest after leaving Dorit Rabinyan’s Gader Haya (Borderlife) off school reading lists
-
The 31st year of the ‘ongoing national joke’ art prize; the truth of Alex’s murder is revealed; Trev visits Sin City; Reggie investigates homophobia. Plus: Crackanory’s new series starts
-
In 1967, Amos Oz interviewed Israeli soldiers as they returned victorious from war. This documentary at last lets them explain why they were so depressed
-
New documentary Censored Voices records ex-soldiers telling of their regrets over brutal 1967 conflict
-
The Black Swan star’s directoral debut – based on Amos Oz’s A Tale of Love and Darkness – explores the ‘mythology’ surrounding the birth of the Jewish state. Is she ready for the inevitable backlash?
-
Israel’s PM has been ordered by the country’s attorney general to reinstate three judges he removed from the Israel Prize because of their leftwing views
-
Prime minister accused of declaring war on Israel’s intellectual life after he vetoed appointment of three judges to country’s most prestigious award
-
A fictional West Bank settlement and the chaotic lives its inhabitants lead reflect the contradictions and complexities of life in modern Israel. By Ian Sansom
-
Abdullah Abdullah takes newly created role of chief executive, while Ashraf Ghani will be president, ending months of turmoil
-
Vocal opposition to the war in Gaza can be hard to express in Israel, where campaigner Gideon Levy says people 'leave their liberalism' at the 1967 border
-
Senior ministers Tzipi Livni and Yitzhak Aharonovitch condemn 'price-tag' attacks as author Amos Oz calls militants neo-Nazis
-
Landscapes of the Metropolis of Death hailed by judges as 'the greatest book on Auschwitz since Primo Levi'
-
Ben Child: Oscar-winning actor's shoot for A Tale of Love and Darkness is condemned by an ultra-orthodox community in Jerusalem
-
Black Swan actor will fly to Israel in September to begin work on film of Amos Oz's bestselling novel about his early years
-
David Grossman, Amos Oz and AB Yehoshua are among 24 writers calling for reprieve for villages in South Hebron hills
-
Alberto Manguel finds heartbreak and hope in tales from the kibbutz
-
Chris Power: 2012 is being touted as 'the year of the short story', but the last 12 months are going to be hard to beat
-
Amos Oz's 1968 classic takes the reader into the fevered mind of a young woman in 50s Jerusalem, writes Rosanna Boscawen
-
Alfred Hickling finds that Amos Oz's stories come to a bleak conclusion
-
Ian Sansom acclaims Amos Oz's fairy story
-
Amy Bloom discusses her short story collection Where the God of Love Hangs Out, and we hear from Israel's most translated author and surely Nobel laureate in waiting, Amos Oz
-
This fable, though based on fairytales told by the writer's mother, is informed by the horrors of real life, writes David Mattin
-
Israeli novelist heads up Ladbrokes's betting odds for the Nobel prize for literature while British writers trail
Topics
- Israel
- Middle East and North Africa
- Fiction
- Palestinian territories
- Natalie Portman
- Judaism
- Religion
- Benjamin Netanyahu
- Cannes 2015
- Autobiography and memoir
- Cannes film festival
- Awards and prizes
- Film adaptations
- Short stories
- US foreign policy
- Biography
- Pope Francis
- Middle East peace talks
- Nobel prize in literature
- Graphic design
Judas by Amos Oz – review