Don't Call It Night by Amos Oz
Author:Amos Oz [Oz, Amos]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
Published: 0101-01-01T00:00:00+00:00
IN February 1981 I dropped into the Embassy in Caracas to pick up an envelope containing some material I had sent for from the office in Israel. The new receptionist explained to me, with an air of sympathy and particular delicacy, as if she had the task of softening the blow to a patient receiving the results of tests, that the package was locked in the security officer's safe, and he would not be back for another hour or so. Meanwhile, she sat me down on a wicker chair, gave me some coffee that I had not asked for—it was sharp, penetrating coffee, that almost felt alcoholic—and in a few moments managed to make me feel that I had charmed her. She had not a trace of inhibition when she said to me in her young girl's voice, some ten minutes after I entered the office: Stay for a bit. You're interesting.
A woman of medium height, she moved around the room as though every movement of her body pleased her; her blonde fringe tossed lightly on her forehead, and she was wearing a colourful printed dress. When she stood up to pour the coffee her dress whirled round her legs and I noticed something athletic, though unhurried and relaxed, in her bearing. She contrived to hint without really hinting that it was I who was arousing the feminine signal that was emanating from her, you are attractive, I am attracted, why should I hide it, and I discovered, to my own surprise, that almost unawares I had begun to return her signals. All these years I had been avoiding the company of Israelis, and especially those progressive, cooperative Tel Avivi girls with reasoned views for or against everything in the world. In my years of wandering around these parts I had been drawn to a hypnotic tropical femininity that sometimes seemed imprisoned like a dark flame in a cage of Hispanic arrogance. Yet here was this fair-haired, green-eyed, energetic woman with her bell-like voice, her face openly beaming with the pleasure I was affording her, bursting with generous vitality. With a movement of the shoulder and hip that said, Take a look, this is a body, she stirred something inside me that almost resembled the relaxed openness that is experienced sometimes in a meeting between childhood friends. There was also a sudden urge to make a strong impression on her. Yet for years and years I had made no effort, I had not had to make any, to impress a woman.
Within ten minutes I had learned that she was a literature teacher, that she had been born and lived until a few years previously in a village at the eastern end of the Hefer Valley, that she had started really living, as she put it, shockingly late, because she had been saddled with a violent, childlike crippled father, that she had hardly any other relatives, and that her name was Noa. You're Theo, I've heard about you, you're quite a legend hereabouts.
Download
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.
Red by Erica Spindler(12668)
Crooked Kingdom: Book 2 (Six of Crows) by Bardugo Leigh(12408)
Twisted Palace by Erin Watt(11240)
Mindhunter: Inside the FBI's Elite Serial Crime Unit by John E. Douglas & Mark Olshaker(9471)
Fangirl by Rainbow Rowell(9403)
Never let me go by Kazuo Ishiguro(9050)
All the Light We Cannot See: A Novel by Anthony Doerr(8554)
A Man Called Ove: A Novel by Fredrik Backman(8508)
The Lover by Duras Marguerite(7997)
Confessions of an Ugly Stepsister by Gregory Maguire(7974)
Little Fires Everywhere by Celeste Ng(7334)
The Vegetarian by Han Kang(6376)
To All the Boys I've Loved Before by Jenny Han(5921)
The Shadow Of The Wind by Carlos Ruiz Zafón(5781)
On the Yard (New York Review Books Classics) by Braly Malcolm(5564)
Keepsake: True North #2 by Sarina Bowen(5460)
Dancing After Hours by Andre Dubus(5333)
Ken Follett - World without end by Ken Follett(4827)
The Perks of Being a Wallflower by Stephen Chbosky(4728)