Touch the Water, Touch the Wind
First edition (Hebrew) | |
| Author | Amos Oz |
|---|---|
| Original title | לגעת במים לגעת ברוח |
| Translator | Nicholas de Lange |
| Language | Hebrew |
| Publisher | Am Oved |
Publication date | 1973 |
| Publication place | Israel |
Published in English | 1974 |
| Pages | 192 |
| ISBN | 0-15-190873-7 |
Touch the Water, Touch the Wind (Hebrew: לגעת במים לגעת ברוח La-ga'at ba-mayim, la-ga'at ba-ruah) is the third novel of Israeli author Amos Oz and was published in 1973.
Plot
Elisha, a provincial Jewish school principal flees the Nazis in Europe by self-levitating to Israel, the promised land. Once on land, he makes a living by repairing watches and herding sheep. He has endless thoughts about infinity. Meanwhile, his wife, Stefa has also escaped Europe, to Moscow, aided by the Devil. There, she becomes acquainted with Stalin and becomes a senior figure in an international revolutionary wing of the Soviet Union. Elisha and Stefa are reunited in Israel when the latter gives up her burgeoning political career for her marriage. Once reunited, the descend into the core of the earth.[1]
Reception
Alan H. Friedman reviewed the novel forThe New York Times: "This is the third novel by the lavishly gifted Israeli writer Amos Oz, and it offers a profusion of delightful passages couched in unfailingly lovely language."[1] Friedman continued: "But scenes are treated with high-handed brevity, tangled relationships are snipped and summarized, interesting minor characters are inflated like balloons till they become pointlessly major, major figures are delineated like cartoons till they become interesting abstractions, flavorful thickenings in the plot are at once diluted, and the result, though beguiling is an exquisite sketch for a grand novel."[1]
References
- ^ a b c Friedman, Alan (24 November 1974). Touch the Water Touch the Wind The New York Times. Retrieved on 1 March 2026.