The Jerusalem Post

Joshua Cohen’s ‘The Netanyahus’ wins Pulitzer

- • By ANDREW SILOW-CARROLL

The 2022 Pulitzer Prize in fiction went to The Netanyahus, a scathing, satirical novel by Brooklyn writer Joshua Cohen that imagines a visit by the family of the former Israeli prime minister to an American college town in the early 1960s.

The prize committee called the novel “a mordant, linguistic­ally deft historical novel about the ambiguitie­s of the Jewish-American experience, presenting ideas and disputes as volatile as its tightly-wound plot.”

Cohen, 41, based the novel on a real-life visit by Benzion Netanyahu, a historian and the father of Benjamin Netanyahu, to Cornell University, where the elder Netanyahu served as a professor of Judaic studies from 1971–1975. Cohen said the story of the Netanyahus’s initial visit to the campus was related to him by the late literary critic Harold Bloom.

Reviews were largely positive for the novel; The Guardian called it “a comic historical fantasia – a dizzying range of bookish learning and worldly knowhow is given rich, resourcefu­l expression.” The novel won the Jewish Book

Council’s fiction award for 2021.

But there were detractors. Jewish Currents criticized the novel for being derivative of both Philip Roth and Saul Bellow, and the Jewish Review of Books said that the novel includes “a capsule history of Zionism that is so blatant a distortion that I just gave up.”

The Netanyahus is Cohen’s sixth novel.

One of the finalists for the fiction prize was Monkey Boy, by Francisco Goldman, based in part on Goldman’s own background as the son of a Jewish father and a Guatemalan Catholic mother. (JTA)

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