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The Story Begins: Essays on Literature » (1ST)

Book cover image of The Story Begins: Essays on Literature by Amos Oz

Authors: Amos Oz, Maggie Bar-Tura
ISBN-13: 9780151002979, ISBN-10: 0151002975
Format: Hardcover
Publisher: Harcourt
Date Published: March 1999
Edition: 1ST

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Author Biography: Amos Oz

AMOS OZ is a world-renowned novelist and essayist whose books include My Michael, To Know a Woman, Don't Call It Night, and The Same Sea. Most recently, his memoir, A Tale of Love and Darkness, received the Koret Jewish Book Award.

Book Synopsis

Illuminating essays on the beginnings-the opening pages-of some of literature's nineteenth- and twentieth-century masterpieces

Publishers Weekly

Examining the trouble the blank page presents to a writer--"beginning to tell a story is like making a pass at a stranger in a restaurant"--Israeli novelist Oz (Panther in the Basement) considers the methods authors use to draw readers into the "opening contracts" of a narrative. One oddity of this thin collection of essays, derived from talks at high schools and colleges, is that Oz has read each text in a Hebrew translation (except for a few Israeli writers who wrote in Hebrew to begin with), whether by Chekhov or Gogol, Theodor Fontane or Marquez, which presumably affects at least nuances, especially given that Oz focuses on such small portions of the texts. Oz's interest in discovering what the reader must accept to become entrapped in the tale is especially illuminating of Chekhov's "Rothschild's Fiddle" and Elsa Morante's History: A Novel. In other analyses--for instance, a Raymond Carver story or a Franz Kafka fantasy--extensive quotations only pad elaborations of the obvious. This short, if feisty and often amusing, book is ultimately sketchy, suggesting a longer study abandoned early in the going. It certainly would have been more fruitful if Oz had spent as much time contemplating middles and endings as he does fretting about beginnings.

Table of Contents

Introduction: But What Actually Existed Here Before the Big Bang?1
The Imperceptible Progress of Shade: On the Beginning of Effi Briest by Theodore Fontane11
Who Has Come?: On the Beginning of "In the Prime of Her Life" by S. Y. Agnon17
With an Expression of Very Respectable Importance: On the Beginning of Gogol's "The Nose"28
A Log in a Freshet: On the Beginning of Kafka's "A Country Doctor"37
Huge Losses: On the Beginning of Chekhov's "Rothschild's Fiddle"48
The Heat and the Day and the Wind: On the Beginning of S. Yizhar's Novel Mikdamot56
Into Mother's Bosom: On Several Beginnings in Elsa Morante's History: A Novel65
How Was It Possible for a Cow to Get onto the Balcony: On the Beginning of Gabriel Garcia Marquez's The Autumn of the Patriarch88
Take It Outside Before I Throw Up: On the Beginning of Raymond Carver's Story "Nobody Said Anything"95
From Tnuva to Monaco: On the Beginning of Yaakov Shabtai's Story "A Private and Very Awesome Leopard"104
Conclusion: Leisurely Pleasure113

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