Online Book Reader

Home Category

Fima - Amos Oz [0]

By Root 471 0
Fima


Amos Oz

Table of Contents


Title Page

Table of Contents

...

...

Copyright

CONTENTS

1. PROMISE AND GRACE

2. FIMA GETS UP FOR WORK

3. A CAN OF WORMS

4. HOPES OF OPENING A NEW CHAPTER

5. FIMA GETS SOAKED IN THE DARK IN THE POURING RAIN

6. AS IF SHE WERE HIS SISTER

7. WITH THIN FISTS

8. A DISAGREEMENT ON THE QUESTION OF WHO THE INDIANS REALLY ARE

9. "THERE ARE SO MANY THINGS WE COULD TALK ABOUT, COMPARE"

10. FIMA FORGIVES AND FORGETS

11. AS FAR AS THE LAST LAMPPOST

12. THE FIXED DISTANCE BETWEEN HIM AND HER

13. THE ROOT OF ALL EVIL

14. DISCOVERING THE IDENTITY OF A FAMOUS FINNISH GENERAL

15. BEDTIME STORIES

16. FIMA COMES TO THE CONCLUSION THAT THERE IS STILL A CHANCE

17. NIGHTLIFE

18. "YOU'VE FORGOTTEN YOURSELF"

19. IN THE MONASTERY

20. FIMA IS LOST IN THE FOREST

21. BUT THE GLOWWORM HAD VANISHED

22. "I FEEL GOOD WITH YOU JUST LIKE THIS"

23. FIMA FORGETS WHAT HE HAS FORGOTTEN

24. SHAME AND GUILT

25. FINGERS THAT WERE NO FINGERS

26. CHILI

27. FIMA REFUSES TO GIVE IN

28. IN ITHACA, ON THE WATER'S EDGE

29. BEFORE THE SABBATH

30. AT LEAST AS FAR AS POSSIBLE

Translated from the Hebrew by

NICHOLAS DE LANGE

A HARVEST BOOK

A HELEN AND KURT WOLFF BOOK

HARCOURT, INC.


Orlando Austin New York San Diego London

Copyright © 1991 by Amos Oz and

Maxwell-Macmillan-Keter Publishing Ltd.

English translation copyright © 1993 by Nicholas de Lange


All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or

transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical,

including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and

retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.

Requests for permission to make copies of any part of the work

should be submitted online at www.harcourt.com/contact or

mailed to the following address: Permissions Department,

Houghton Mifllin Harcourt Publishing Company,

6277 Sea Harbor Drive, Orlando, Florida 32887-6777.

www.HarcourtBooks.com

Translation of The Third Condition by Amos Oz, originally

published in Israel in 1991.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Oz, Amos.

[Matsav ha-shelishi. English]

Fima/Amos Oz: translated from the Hebrew by Nicholas

de Lange.—1st ed.

p. cm.

"A Helen and Kurt Wolff book."

ISBN 978-0-15-189851-0

ISBN 978-0-15-600143-4 (pbk.)

I. Title.

PJ5054.O9M3513 1993

892.4'36—dc20 92-44200

Designed by Lori J. McThomas

Printed in the United States of America

First Harvest edition 1994

N M L K J I H G

CONTENTS


1

PROMISE AND GRACE / [>]

2

FIMA GETS UP FOR WORK / [>]

3

A CAN OF WORMS / [>]

4

HOPES OF OPENING A NEW CHAPTER / [>]

5

FIMA GETS SOAKED IN THE DARK

IN THE POURING RAIN / [>]

6

AS IF SHE WERE HIS SISTER / [>]

7

WITH THIN FISTS / [>]

8

A DISAGREEMENT ON THE QUESTION

OF WHO THE INDIANS REALLY ARE / [>]

9

"THERE ARE SO MANY THINGS WE

COULD TALK ABOUT, COMPARE" / [>]

10

FIMA FORGIVES AND FORGETS / [>]

11

AS FAR AS THE LAST LAMPPOST / [>]

12

THE FIXED DISTANCE BETWEEN

HIM AND HER / [>]

13

THE ROOT OF ALL EVIL / [>]

14

DISCOVERING THE IDENTITY OF A

FAMOUS FINNISH GENERAL / [>]

15

BEDTIME STORIES / [>]

16

FIMA COMES TO THE CONCLUSION

THAT THERE IS STILL A CHANCE / [>]

17

NIGHTLIFE / [>]

18

"YOU'VE FORGOTTEN YOURSELF" / [>]

19

IN THE MONASTERY / [>]

20

FIMA IS LOST IN THE FOREST / [>]

21

BUT THE GLOWWORM HAD VANISHED / [>]

22

"I FEEL GOOD WITH YOU

JUST LIKE THIS" / [>]

23

FIMA FORGETS WHAT HE

HAS FORGOTTEN / [>]

24

SHAME AND GUILT / [>]

25

FINGERS THAT WERE NO FINGERS / [>]

26

CHILI / [>]

27

FIMA REFUSES TO GIVE IN / [>]

28

IN ITHACA, ON THE WATER'S EDGE / [>]

29

BEFORE THE SABBATH / [>]

30

AT LEAST AS FAR AS POSSIBLE / [>]

1. PROMISE AND GRACE


FIVE NIGHTS BEFORE THE SAD EVENT, FIMA HAD A DREAM WHICH he recorded at half past five in the morning in his dream book, a brown notebook that always lay beneath an untidy heap of old newspapers and magazines on the floor at the foot of his bed. In this book Fima had made it his habit to write down, in bed, as the first pale lines of dawn

Return Main Page Next Page

®Online Book Reader