“I was covered in gore, dripping in slime, and in a very bad mood.”
Lavie Tidhar“These were the facts. Facts were important. They separated fiction from reality, the tawdry world of Mike Longshott from the concrete spaces of Joe's world.”
Lavie Tidhar, Osama“For one crazy moment he had the notion of a vanished tribe of librarians, lost in the deep underground caverns of the Bodleian, a wild and savage tribe that fed on unwary travellers.”
Lavie Tidhar, The Bookman“Orphan could no longer hear or see the shadows of the dead. He didn't think they had perished. Most likely they were hiding now, somewhere in this landscape of books.”
Lavie Tidhar, The Bookman“Listen to this. A bomb goes off downtown and the police arrest the Easter bunny, Santa Claus, the tooth fairy and Osama Bin Laden. They put them in an identity parade and have a witness try to point out the perpetrator. Who does she pick?"Joe said, "I don’t know.""Osama Bin Laden," the taxi driver said. "Because the other three don’t exist.”
Lavie Tidhar, Osama“The fat man looked amused. "What on earth for?" he said. "I never have any contact with writers. If I do, they just keep pestering me about getting paid.”
Lavie Tidhar, Osama“Destiny is like a book. It needs manufacturing, the pulp process, the glue fixed tightly--and it requires a binding, to hold it together, lest it fall apart.”
Lavie Tidhar, The Bookman“Meeting one’s heroes is always such a disappointment.”
Lavie Tidhar, The Violent Century“I was covered in gore, dripping in slime, and in a very bad mood.”
Lavie Tidhar, The Old Dispensation“In the words he’s free, on the page he can be anything. A hero.”
Lavie Tidhar, The Violent Century“Family wasn't like that, not really. It was not something small and compact, a "nuclear family": it was a great big mess of people, all interlinked, cousins and aunts and relatives-by-marriage and otherwise--it was a network, like the Conversation or a human brain. It was what he had tried to escape, going into the Up and Out, but you cannot run away from family, it follows you, wherever you go.”
Lavie Tidhar, Central Station