Wingate Literary Prize
Shortlist announced
The shortlisted titles for this years Jewish Quarterly Wingate Literary Prizes
for Fiction and Non-Fiction are announced today (1 March). These are the only
awards in the UK to recognise major works of Jewish interest. The shortlist
is as follows:
Fiction:
| Author |
Title |
Publisher |
| Agnes Desarthe |
Five Photos of My Wife |
Flamingo |
| Zvi Jagendorf |
Wolfy and the Strudelbakers |
Dewi Lewis |
| Emma Richler |
Sister Crazy |
Flamingo |
| W.G. Sebald |
Austerlitz |
Hamish Hamilton |
Non-Fiction:
| Author |
Title |
Publisher |
| John Gross |
A Double Thread |
Chatto & Windus |
| Joseph Roth |
The Wandering Jews |
Granta |
| Oliver Sacks |
Uncle Tungsten |
Picador |
| Mihail Sebastian |
Journal 1935-44 |
William Heinemann
|
In a particularly strong year for fiction, the shortlisted books transport
the reader into contrasting worlds; comic, haunting and ironic by turn. The
tragically recent death of W.G Sebald on the fiction shortlist makes the final
selection all the more poignant.
Memoir is the dominant genre for this years non-fiction shortlist and the
selected titles each evoke a vivid, moving image of childhood.
Martyn Goff, Award Chairman, comments:
The remarkable standard of entries this year speaks for itself. With the
phenomenal proportion of hits to misses, narrowing the list of contenders down
to eight books was a real challenge. We were honoured to have had the opportunity
to read some wonderfully written books and hope that our experience will encourage
others to read them
The winners of the Jewish Quarterly Wingate Prize will be announced on May
2nd at an awards ceremony to take place at the Arts Club. The Fiction
and Non-Fiction Prize are each worth £4,000 and three shortlisted runners-up
in each category are awarded £300 each.
Details of the eight titles on the shortlist are attached to
this release.
Notes to Editors
- Established in 1977 by the late Harold Hyam Wingate, the Jewish Quarterly
Wingate Literary Prize is now in its 25th year. The prizes for fiction
and non-fiction are worth £4,000 to each category winner; with £300 also awarded
for the three shortlisted runners-ups in each category, the awards have a total
prize value of almost £10,000.
- The judges of the Jewish Quarterly Wingate Literary Prizes may be available
for interview. Please contact Shona Abhyankar or Dotti Irving at Colman Getty
PR on 020 7631 2666 or email shona@colmangettypr.co.uk
- A list of former winners is available from Colman Getty PR.
- Jewish and non-Jewish authors resident in the UK, British Commonwealth,
Europe and Israel are eligible. Books submitted must be in English, either
originally or in translation.
- Published in London since 1953, The Jewish Quarterly is one of the
foremost literary and cultural journals in the English language. Its spectrum
of subjects includes art, criticism, fiction, film, history, Judaism, literature,
poetry, philosophy, politics, theatre, the Shoah and Zionism.
- The Harold Hyam Wingate Charitable Foundation is a private grant-giving
institution, first established more than forty years ago. It has supported
the Jewish Quarterly Wingate Literary Prizes for 20 years, and, since 1989,
has also organised and supported the Wingate Scholarships.
For further information and interview requests, please contact
Shona Abhyankar or Dotti Irving at:
Colman Getty PR
17 & 18 Margaret Street
London W1W 8RP
Tel : 020 7631 2666
Fax: 020 7631 2699
shona@colmangettypr.co.uk
Background information on this years judging panel is attached
The Jewish Quarterly Wingate Literary Prizes 2002
The Judges
Martyn Goff OBE (Chair) has been a key figure in the publishing industry
for more than 30 years. He is Executive Chairman of Henry Sotheran Ltd, chief
administrator of the Booker Prize for Fiction, chairman of Books for Keeps,
The National Life Story Collection, The Wingate Scholarships and The London
Writers Competition (in association with Wandsworth Council and Waterstones),
Trustee of the National Literacy Trust, and Vice President of Book Trust and
the Royal Overseas League. Martyn Goff lives in London.
Rosie Boycott is a respected journalist,
author and broadcaster and former editor of the Independent on Sunday
and the Daily Express. In January 2002 she began presenting a BBC2 religious
programme based on morals and ethics. Rosie Boycott lives in London.
Kimberly Fortier is publisher and chief
executive of The Spectator magazine and former Communications
and Marketing Director for Conde Nast UK. She hails originally from Los Angeles
and studied History and English at Vassar University. A respected journalist,
she writes for several publications including Vogue, Evening Standard,
The Independent, The Wall Street Journal, The Times, The Daily Telegraph
and Erotic Review. Kimberly Fortier lives in London.
Boyd Tonkin has been
Literary Editor of The Independent since 1996 and also broadcasts regularly
on various BBC radio arts programmes. He taught English in higher and adult
education before becoming a journalist. He went on to become Features Editor
at Community Care magazine before joining the New Statesman as
social policy editor. He became Literary Editor at the New Statesman
in 1991 and also wrote on books and the arts for a range of newspapers and magazines,
including The Observer. Boyd Tonkin lives in London.
Rabbi William Wolff is minister of Wimbledon & District Synagogue
and will soon take up the position of regional rabbi in North East Germany.
He has previously served Reform and Liberal communities in Brighton, Reading,
Milton Keynes and Newcastle upon Tyne, and started his career in the rabbinate
as an assistant to Rabbi Hugo Gryn at the West London Synagogue. Before qualifying
at Leo Baeck College as a rabbi he was a Fleet Street journalist. Rabbi Wolff
lives in Henley, Oxfordshire.
The Jewish Quarterly Wingate Literary Prizes 2002
Shortlist
Fiction:
Austerlitz
W G Sebald Hamish Hamilton
£16.99
W. G Sebald was killed in a road accident on 14 December 2001. Resident
in England for almost forty years, he will be remembered as a literary scholar
and distinguished academic. Austerlitz was entered for this years Jewish
Quarterly Wingate Literary Prize prior to his untimely death.
Summer 1939. Five-year-old Jacques Austerlitz is sent to England on one of
the so-called Kindertransports and placed with Calvinist foster parents in Wales.
For reasons unknown, the child is denied all knowledge of his true identity.
He eventually becomes an architectural historian and goes through life carefully
avoiding any clues that may shed light on his origins and the fate of his real
parents. It is only in retirement that the past returns to haunt him and Jacques
Austerlitz is forced to explore what really happened half a century ago.
W G Sebald was born in Wertach im Allg”u, Germany in 1944. He studied
German language and literature in Freiburg, Switzerland and Manchester and took
up permanent residence in England in 1970 whilst working as an assistant lecturer
at the University of Manchester. He was Professor of English Literature at the
University of East Anglia, and his other works of fiction are The Emigrants,
which won many awards including the Berlin Literature Prize, the Heinrich B–ll
Prize, the Heinrich Heine Prize and the Joseph Breitbach Prize; The Rings
of Saturn and Vertigo.
Press Contact: Charlotte Greig or Abbie Sampson at Hamish Hamilton on 020 7010
3279 or Email: charlotte.greig@penguin.co.uk
/ abbie.sampson@penguin.co.uk
Sister Crazy
Emma Richler Flamingo
£12.99
Jemima Jem Weiss grew up with a fondness for Action Man, American westerns,
bagels with cheddar on top, and, especially, her family ‚ mother, father and
four remarkable siblings. Sister Crazy tells of Jems struggle against
dark times as she reflects on her days as a young girl and fights against the
present. Jem has an incredible imagination, one that transforms her family into
mythological beings. Sister Crazy chronicles her attempts to find her
way alone in the real world.
Daughter of distinguished author Mordecai Richler, Emma Richler was
born in London and spent some of her childhood in Montreal. After studying French
literature at the University of Toronto and the UniversitÈ de Provence she trained
as an actress in New York and then spent ten years in the UK working in theatre,
film, television drama and BBC radio.
Emma Richler lives in London.
Press contact: Karen Duffy at Flamingo on 020 8307 4349 or Karen.duffy@harpercollins.co.uk
Wolfy and the Strudelbakers
Zvi Jagendorf Dewi Lewis Publishing
£8.99
Set in wartime and post-war England, Wolfy and
the Strudelbakers is a comic take on the disaster zone of displacement and
exile. Wolfy lives near Arsenal Football Club with the strudelbakers ‚ his
super-critical aunt and melancholy uncle ‚ in the bizarre world of refugees
granted shelter from persecution. Wolfy observes his new world with a sharp
eye; the bafflement of his English neighbours at the secretive, alien nature
of his Jewish family and their comical traditions as they discover England through
the blitz, evacuation, menial work, school reports and Christmas.
Zvi Jagendorf teaches English and Theatre
Studies at the Hebrew University, Jerusalem. His short stories have been widely
published and he contributes regular reviews to a broad range of magazines both
in Israel and abroad.
Zvi Jagendorf was born in February 1936 in Vienna.
He now lives in Israel.
Press contact: Dewi Lewis or Caroline Warhurst at
Dewi Lewis Publishing on 0161 442 9450 or mail@dewilewispublishing.com
Five Photos of My Wife
Agnes Desarthe Flamingo
£9.99
Max Opass is still reeling from his wife Telmas death. His two grown-up children
and their families live abroad and through a series of awkward letters to his
daughter, we learn that Max has decided to have Telmas portrait painted. He
picks a few artists at random from the Yellow Pages and proceeds to commission
them to paint Telmas portrait using five snapshots of her for reference. The
portraits do not go without incidence; one artist intimidates Max; another provokes
sympathy; a pair of art students baffle him; and an elderly bridge player reveals
more than a friendly interest in him. Through a series of confrontations it
becomes clear that perhaps Max did not know Telma as well as he thought. Each
encounter is at once moving and comic ‚ just like Max himself.
AgnËs Desarthe is the author of two previous novels for adults, Un
Secret sans Importance and Quelques Minutes du Bonher Absolu. Five
Photos of My Wife is her first book to be translated into English. She lives
in Paris with her husband, a filmmaker, and children.
Press contact: Karen Duffy at Flamingo on 020 8307 4349 or Karen.duffy@harpercollins.co.uk
Non-Fiction:
A Double Thread
John Gross Chatto & Windus
£18.99
A Double Thread is an evocative picture of a lost London. Full of memorable
encounters and characters, it is essentially the story of an Mile End boy finding
his way in literary life which makes for an unusual memoir. It is also a poignant
reflection of an East End childhood spent living with two separate yet entwined
legacies, Jewish and English.
John Gross is the theatre critic of the Sunday Telegraph and
a former editor of The Times Literary Supplement. For many years he lived
in New York and worked on the New Yorker as a staff writer. His previous
works include The Rise and Fall of Letters and Shylock: One
Hundred Years in the Life of Legend. He has edited several anthologies including
The Oxford Book of Essays and The Oxford Book of English Prose.
John Gross lives in London, SW3.
Press contact: Patrick Hargadon at Chatto & Windus on 020 7840 8540 or
Karen.duffy@harpercollins.co.uk
Uncle Tungsten
Oliver Sacks Picador
£17.99
A personal account of a childhood, Uncle Tungsten is a memoir of wartime
England. Sacks tells of the largely scientifically minded family who fostered
his early fascination with metals, and then the unhappy yet formative years
at boarding school, where he developed the intellectual curiosity that would
shape his life. The reader hears of his return to London as an emotionally bereft
ten year old who finds solace in his passion for learning about metals, gases
and chemicals - the hidden order of things outside himself.
Oliver Sacks was born in London and educated in London, Oxford and California.
He is a neurologist working in New York City, where he is also clinical professor
of neurology at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, and adjunct professor
of neurology at the NYU School of Medicine. Oliver Sacks has won numerous awards
for his writing including the Hawthornden Prize, a Polk Award and a Guggenheim
fellowship. His previous books include Awakenings and The Man who
Mistook his Wife for a Hat.
Press contact: Jacqueline Graham at Picador on 020 7014 6181 or Karen.duffy@harpercollins.co.uk
The Wandering Jews
oseph Roth Granta
£6.99
In The Wandering Jews, Roths first translation into
English, he sets out to explore the Jewish communities scattered across Europe.
With his trademark journalistic style, Roth brings back reports of hope, poverty,
fear and persecution. He witnessed the twilight years of the shtetls
and schools of Eastern Europe, and foresaw the dangers posed by extreme German
nationalism.
Joseph Roth was born in 1894 in, what was then, the Hapsburg
Empire. After studying in Lemberg and Vienna, he served for a while with the
Austrio-Hungarian army on the Eastern Front ‚ though possibly only as an army
journalist or censor. He moved to Berlin where he wrote for the Frankfurter
Zeitung. When the Nazis took power in Germany, Roth severed all ties with
Germany. He lived in Paris, Amsterdam and Ostend and descended into a life of
heavy drinking and money worries. His works of fiction include The Spiders
Web, Hotel Savoy and Rebellion.
Joseph Roth died in Paris in 1939.
Press contact: Louise Campbell at Granta on 7354 4236 or
lcampbell@granta.com
Journal 1935 - 44
Mihail Sebastian William Heinemann
£20
Journal 1935-44 is a chronicle of the darkest years
of European anti-Semitism as well as an analysis of social life, a writers
notebook and a music-lovers journal. Some may see it as an account of the major
Romanian intellectuals who were Sebastians friends, including Mircea Eliade
and E.M Cioran - writers and thinkers who were mesmerized by the Nazi-fascist
delirium of
Europes reactionary revolution. Journal describes
pre-war Bucharest, then affectionately known as Little Paris.
Mihail Sebastian was the pen-name of the Romanian writer
Iosif Hechter. Born in the Danube port of BrÂila, he was well known for his
lyrical and ironic plays and for his urbane psychological novels.
Mihail Sebastian died in a road accident in 1945.
Press Contact: Emma Mitchell at William Heinemann on 020
7840 8610 or EMitchell@randomhouse.co.uk
For further information and interview requests, please contact
Shona Abhyankar or Dotti Irving at:
Colman Getty PR
17 & 18 Margaret Street
London W1W 8RP
Tel : 020 7631 2666
Fax: 020 7631 2699
Karen.duffy@harpercollins.co.uk
|