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The Heart of Amos Oz

Love, War & Grief
  • ISBN-13: 9781922768612
  • Publisher: HYBRID PUBLISHERS
    Imprint: HYBRID PUBLISHERS
  • By Dvir Abramovich
  • Price: AUD $24.99
  • Stock: 168 in stock
  • Availability: Order will be despatched as soon as possible.
  • Local release date: 01/07/2026
  • Format: Paperback (234.00mm X 156.00mm) 224 pages Weight: 300g
  • Categories: Literature: history & criticism [DS]
Description
Author
Biography
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If you’re looking for literary theory, jargon, or safe distance, put this book back on the shelf now. The Heart of Amos Oz: Love, War & Grief brings you close to Amos Oz not as a legend, but as a man. A son marked by his mother’s death. An Israeli writer who spent a lifetime turning love, loss, and pain into words that millions felt were written for them. You don’t need to know one of the world’s most celebrated authors to read this book. You only need to have loved someone, lost someone, or carried a hurt that didn’t leave when you expected it to. Amos Oz wrote about family, marriage, loneliness, fear, and hope in a way that crossed borders. His work became a mirror for readers in Sydney and New York, Paris and London, anywhere people were trying to make sense of their lives. Dvir Abramovich writes with rare openness, laying bare his own wounds and doubts in order to reach the heart of Amos Oz and to understand what made his writing so human, so unsettling, and so necessary. If this speaks to you, you won’t be leaving it behind.

Dr Dvir Abramovich is one of Australia’s most sought-after public intellectuals, shaping conversations on culture, literature, and contemporary Jewish life. He is the Israel Kipen Director of the Program in Jewish Culture & Society at the University of Melbourne and Chair of the Anti-Defamation Commission. Known for his direct, forceful voice, Abramovich brings insight, historical depth, and moral urgency to debates about Israel, antisemitism and the Holocaust. The author of eight books, Abramovich writes to be read, argued with, and felt, linking ideas to lived experience and placing complex debates squarely in public view.

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