The Jewish Chronicle

FAMILY STORIES THE WINGATE SHORTLIST

- BY DAVID HERMAN

THE SHORTLIST for the Wingate Literary Prize, Britain’s pre-eminent Jewish books prize, has been announced, with family memoirs leading the field.

Hadley Freeman’s brilliant House of Glass is about the hidden story of her grandmothe­r, Sala Glass. And Ariana Neumann’s acclaimed book, When Time Stopped, is a fascinatin­g account, almost a detective story, about a daughter exploring her father’s hidden and mysterious past.

The family memoir is one of the most interestin­g Jewish literary genres at the moment. Louise Kehoe’s book about her father, the Jewish architect Berthold Lubetkin, In This Dark House, Mark Mazower’s What You Did Not Tell, and, more recently, Martha Leigh’s Invisible Ink and Simon May’s How to be a Refugee, are all superb examples of children coming to terms with their family’s dark and complex past in mid-20th century Europe.

Bess Kalb’s Nobody Will Tell You This But Me is also about the relationsh­ip between the generation­s, in this case a granddaugh­ter and her grandmothe­r. The second and now even the third generation have found their voice, as in the aforementi­oned House of Glass by Hadley Freeman, best known as a writer for The Guardian; On Division, a about the Charedi community by Goldie Goldbloom, an Australian novelist; The Slaughterm­an’s Daughter by the Israeli writer Yaniv Iczkovits; Nobody Will Tell You This But Me, a book about what it is like to be a second or third generation Jew in America, by

Bess Kalb, an American journalist and comedy writer; Apeirogon, about Israeli and Palestinia­n life and interactio­n by Colum McCann, an Irish novelist based in New York; When Time Stopped, a family memoir by Ariana Neumann, who was born and grew up in Venezuela and now lives in London; and We Are the Weather, about climate change, by the American writer, Jonathan Safran Foer.

This is a very balanced list. Four women authors, three men. Two (Freeman and Safran Foer) are very well known, the rest less so, but my two favourite shortliste­d books are by authors who until recently barely known. There is a good mix of fiction and nonfiction.

As a former judge of the Wingate Prize, I am well aware of the pressures on panels. It is hard for a book about Charedi Jews or a quirky book about a granddaugh­ter’s love for her grandmothe­r to compete with books about the Holocaust. But you can’t give the prize to Holocaust books, historical or fictional, every year.

The second issue is about Judaism. The year I was on the panel, a fellowjudg­e, Rabbi Jeremy Rosen, argued passionate­ly that scholarly works about Judaism had been unfairly neglected by a largely secular panel. He lost the debate and Zadie Smith won with her novel, The Autograph Man. This year, the chair of the judges is Rabbi Laura Janner-Klausner, who is unlikely to have overlooked the merits of powerful works about Judaism.

Third, Sephardi authors and subjects have too often been neglected. This isn’t just about the Wingate Prize, of course. Only Jewish Renaissanc­e has provided regular coverage of Sephardi issues.

Finally, there is Israel. Many of the best Israeli writers have won in the past, including Amos Oz, David Grossman, Etgar Keret and Amos Elon. It is no surprise to see a book on Israelis and Palestinia­ns on the shortlist.

The larger question, of course, is what does this shortlist tell us about the state of Jewish literature? There is good news and bad news. The good news is how wide-ranging Jewish books have become. Here are books by Americans, an Israeli, an Australian, a South American and an Irishman. The subjects are an interestin­g mix, ranging from survibook

vors to Charedim, from a Yiddish-speaking slaughterm­an and his daughter in the Russian Pale to Parisian fashion.

It is also good to see so many young and less well-known authors. Hadley Freeman, Bess Kalb, Iczkovits and Jonathan Safran Foer are all in their 30s and early 40s.

Apart from Foer, none of these are famous, well-establishe­d book writers like so many past winners.

So, what is missing? Neumann’s compelling memoir is a first-rate debut, but it is too early to say whether she will become a great writer. Foer was a great writer, one of the most exciting of his generation, but it is some time since he wrote an acclaimed novel. In short, it is not yet clear if we have a single great writer on this shortlist. No Sebald, Anne Michaels or Imre Kertesz, all past winners. No Bellow, Roth or Malamud. No historians, scientists or great thinkers. Think of Oliver Sacks, Nikolaus Wachsmann, Mark Roseman or David Cesarani, all either past winners or shortliste­d.

And, finally, something of a curiosity: no British-born writers, though Freeman (who has dual US-British citizenshi­p) and Neumann (who has triple Czech-Venezuelan-British citizenshi­p) are both based in London.

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 ?? PHOTOS: SHTERNA GOLDBLOOM, JEFF MERMELSTEI­N, LUCAS FOGLIA, ERIC SULTAN , ELIZABETH EAGLE ?? Goldie Goldbloom
PHOTOS: SHTERNA GOLDBLOOM, JEFF MERMELSTEI­N, LUCAS FOGLIA, ERIC SULTAN , ELIZABETH EAGLE Goldie Goldbloom
 ??  ?? Jonathan Safran Foer
Jonathan Safran Foer
 ??  ?? Ariana Neumann
Ariana Neumann
 ??  ?? Yaniv Iczkovits
Yaniv Iczkovits
 ??  ?? Hadley Freeman
Hadley Freeman
 ??  ?? Colum McCann
Colum McCann
 ??  ?? Bess Kalb
Bess Kalb

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