Review
`This is a great novel, a rare example of a book that lives up to its billing,... quite literally, unforgettable'
--Sunday Herald
`...this is a powerful and memorable novel, which movingly evokes the strains of war and peace in one household... -- The Sunday Times
`...extraordinary epic of love, war and sorrow...Stunning -- brilliantly written and beautifully constructed.' -- The Times
`...a deeply serious, utterly honest work about the state of Israel.' -- Financial Times
'...a novel which deals with...love, intimacy, war, memory and fear of personal and national annihilation--and has overwhelmingly achieved everything.' -- The Independent
'...people are often accused of failing to see...the Israeli...view. To the End of the Land sears this...onto the memory. -- Sunday Times Culture Magazine
`David Grossman explores how words illuminate the darkest landscapes and how lives can be shaped and preserved through stories' --Daily Mail
`...wonderful, and desperately sad' --Metro
'Sorrow and magnificence go hand in hand...potent, moving and emotionally raw. To the End of the Land is unforgettable' --Marie Claire
'...This is a powerful epic of love, loss and loyalty'
-- Psychologies Magazine
"Grossman's account of Ora and Avram's lengthening flight from their painful lives is a tour de force."
--Spectator
"Extraordinary, impassioned [...]without question one of the most powerful and moving novels I have ever read" --The Guardian
"Honeyed and portentous, rhythmic and often breathless, the prose sweeps the reader into a pool of shimmering reflection"
--TLS
"An eloquent and captivating read, and quite possibly a landmark novel in Israeli fiction."
--Timeout
"often impressive, sometimes touching" --The London Review of Books
'He is the finest living novelist I have read. His work is visceral and clear-headed. Though I loved Franzen's Freedom, Grossman's novel is better' --Observer
`To define David Grossman's masterly new novel as the ultimate anti-war oeuvre would not do it justice...To the End of the Land is richer and more complex than a chronicle of war. It is an intimate portrayal of a woman and mother, Ora, who has been compared to Flaubert's Emma or Tolstoy's Anna...With characters with whom the reader can empathise, a powerful if disturbing theme and an element of suspense and the unknown, Grossman's novel, while not easy to read, is well worth the effort'
--The Tablet
--Sunday Herald
`...this is a powerful and memorable novel, which movingly evokes the strains of war and peace in one household... -- The Sunday Times
`...extraordinary epic of love, war and sorrow...Stunning -- brilliantly written and beautifully constructed.' -- The Times
`...a deeply serious, utterly honest work about the state of Israel.' -- Financial Times
'...a novel which deals with...love, intimacy, war, memory and fear of personal and national annihilation--and has overwhelmingly achieved everything.' -- The Independent
'...people are often accused of failing to see...the Israeli...view. To the End of the Land sears this...onto the memory. -- Sunday Times Culture Magazine
`David Grossman explores how words illuminate the darkest landscapes and how lives can be shaped and preserved through stories' --Daily Mail
`...wonderful, and desperately sad' --Metro
'Sorrow and magnificence go hand in hand...potent, moving and emotionally raw. To the End of the Land is unforgettable' --Marie Claire
'...This is a powerful epic of love, loss and loyalty'
-- Psychologies Magazine
"Grossman's account of Ora and Avram's lengthening flight from their painful lives is a tour de force."
--Spectator
"Extraordinary, impassioned [...]without question one of the most powerful and moving novels I have ever read" --The Guardian
"Honeyed and portentous, rhythmic and often breathless, the prose sweeps the reader into a pool of shimmering reflection"
--TLS
"An eloquent and captivating read, and quite possibly a landmark novel in Israeli fiction."
--Timeout
"often impressive, sometimes touching" --The London Review of Books
'He is the finest living novelist I have read. His work is visceral and clear-headed. Though I loved Franzen's Freedom, Grossman's novel is better' --Observer
`To define David Grossman's masterly new novel as the ultimate anti-war oeuvre would not do it justice...To the End of the Land is richer and more complex than a chronicle of war. It is an intimate portrayal of a woman and mother, Ora, who has been compared to Flaubert's Emma or Tolstoy's Anna...With characters with whom the reader can empathise, a powerful if disturbing theme and an element of suspense and the unknown, Grossman's novel, while not easy to read, is well worth the effort'
--The Tablet
Book Description
From one of Israel's most acclaimed writers comes a novel of extraordinary power about family life - the greatest human drama - and the cost of war.











