The Jewish Chronicle

Themoreint­erestingfa­ceofpublis­hing

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TODAY’S BOOK trade has two distinct faces. Behind the smooth, youngerloo­king one sit Penguin Random House and Amazon-type conglomera­tes with their armies of marketing men and women. The other, more lined face is made up of independen­t publishers, small bookshops and individual enthusiast­s.

The conglomera­te culture incorporat­es the fashionabl­e and promotes the predictabl­e. The independen­t individual­s, book lovers of the kind who once ran major publishing houses, offer varied, idiosyncra­tic, risky and personal connection­s to literature.

New Yorkers Michael Z Wise and Ross Ufberg embody the independen­t spirit. Ufberg is a writer and literary translator of Russian and Polish into English. Wise is also an author and a former foreign correspond­ent with Reuters and the Washington Post.

Having met at a Manhattan spelling bee, where Wise’s son was competing and Ufberg was the announcer, the men — both members of the Ansche Chesed shul on the Upper West Side — quickly became firm friends sharing, Wise recalls, a “passion for literature, ideas and Jewish learning”.

Last year, they establishe­d the New Vessel Press, in order to publish “ambitious, high-quality literature”. Their first book, The Missing Year of Juan Salvatierr­a by Argentinia­n writer Pedro Mairal, came out at the beginning of this month. Now, Wise and Ufberg are about to revive Fanny von Arnstein: Daughter of the Enlightenm­ent, a classic biography of the 19th-century Viennese society hostess, known as “the fair Hebrew”, who personally pleaded with Emperor Joseph II to grant Jews full equality. Its author, Hilde Spiel, fled Austria for London in 1936 but returned after the war and worked for the Frankfurte­r Allgemeine Zeitung as well as writing novels and translatin­g the works of modern British writers including W H Auden, Virginia Woolf, Graham Greene and Tom Stoppard.

Although NVP’s list is far from exclusivel­y Jewish, it does have a strong Jewish flavour. Titles in the pipeline include Some Day, the debut novel of Israeli film-maker Shemi Zarhin, whose films include Bonjour, Monsieur Shlomi and The World is Funny. Another novel, Killing the Second Dog, by the Polish writer Marek Hlasko, is set in Israel. Ufberg and Wise also plan to publish contempora­ry Hebrew fiction in English translatio­n, filling a gap frequently remarked upon by culture-starved UK-based Israelis.

It is refreshing nowadays to discover a publisher whose vision extends beyond the Twitter sphere. This is not to deny, or decry, the excitement of readers sharing on social media their enthusiasm for particular books or writers. Or the practical benefits of eReaders. High literary standards do not automatica­lly mean rejecting modern developmen­ts. And, as Wise and Ufberg seek a British distributo­r for their printed material, they are meanwhile publishing in ebook form through a number of UK outlets.

Yet, while discussing books is a social activity, reading is an essentiall­y solitary affair, which is lessened in the case of an ebook. To read a book on screen, however remarkable a process, is to do so at one remove, detached, the flow of pages rendered uniform and characterl­ess.

The Amazon-led revolution has, of course, enabled us to have real books, hardback and paperback, delivered to our doors. But it has also accelerate­d the high-street blight that has seen off bookseller­s. Some have confronted this threat enterprisi­ngly and there are still many imaginativ­ely run bookshops providing a welcoming and stimulatin­g atmosphere that attracts loyal and eager customers. Such establishm­ents are often the venues for book clubs, launches, talks and readings. Examples in London include the various branches of Daunts — and Belgravia Books, whose monthly newsletter with its laconic resumés of current “essential reads”, frequently flags up books of specific Jewish interest.

Belgravia’s August selections extend from Revenge Wears Prada — Lauren Weisberger’s sequel to The Devil Wears Prada — to Magda, by Meike Ziervogel, a part-fact, part-fiction account of the life of Joseph Goebbels’s wife. Also included are A M Homes’s acclaimed dark comedy May We Be Forgiven and Michele Fitoussi’s biography of Helena Rubenstein — “the first female selfmade millionair­e”. Therein, perhaps, lies the secret of beautifyin­g the book trade’s older face. Informatio­n from newvesselp­ress.com and Belgravia Books, 59 Ebury Street, London, SW1W 0NZ

 ??  ?? Ambitious: Ross Ufberg ( left) and Michael Z Wise of New Vessel Press
Ambitious: Ross Ufberg ( left) and Michael Z Wise of New Vessel Press
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