Yoel Hoffmann—"Israel's celebrated avant-garde genius" (The Forward)—supplies the magic missing link between the infinitesimal and the infinitePart novel and part memoir, Yoel Hoffmann's Moods is flooded with feelings, evoked by his family, losses, loves, the soul's hidden powers, old phone books, and life in the Galilee—with its every scent, breeze, notable dog, and odd neighbor. Carrying these shards is a general tenderness, accentuated by a new dimension brought along by "that great big pill of Prozac." Beautifully translated by Peter Cole, Moods is fiction for lovers of poetry and poetry for lovers of fiction—a small marvel of a book, and with its pockets of joy, a curiously cheerful book by an author who once compared himself to "a praying mantis inclined to melancholy."
- The Cat Who Went Underground
- Secrets of State
- Vulgar the Viking and the Rock Cake Raiders
- I'm Not Cinderella (The Princess Chronicles)
- The Seduction Game
- A Christmas Hero For The Bride: A Seven Brides of Christmas Novella
- Shield and Crocus
- The Lion and the Mouse; a Story of an American Life