17/02/2013
The best new fiction and non-fiction. Mariella Frostrup talks to David Baddiel and Naomi Alderman about what defines a Jewish novel, and to Jim Crace about his new novel Harvest.
Mariella Frostrup talks to stand up comedian, tv presenter and novelist David Baddiel and writer and broadaster Naomi Alderman about what defines a Jewish novel, as Jewish Book week begins in London next week. From the pre-eminence of great American icons like Philip Roth and Saul Bellow - to the revered Europeans Kafka, Joseph Roth and Bruno Schulz - and now an emerging generation of British Jewish writers - what if anything do books by Jewish writers have in common? Does the fusion of their Jewish cultural roots with those of their adoptive countries create a particular literary form and what impact does a writer's Jewish identity have on the way such books are received? David Baddiel's last book The Death of Eli Gold appropriately starts at the death bed of a Philip Roth like figure - and Naomi Alderman's debut noel Disobedience rocked the orthodox Jewish community in North London where she was brought up, whilst her latest novel The Liars Gospel tells an alternative history of Jesus.
Jim Crace talks about his new novel Harvest, which will also be his last as he has announced he is retiring as a novelist. The writer of award winning novels such as Continent, Booker shortlisted Quarantine, The Gift of Stones and most recently All That Follows, Harvest is set in an isolated rural community during an unspecified time which feels like the middle ages but could equally be post apocalytic. Despite its historical setting it resonates strongly with contemporary concerns, exploring as it does the impact of rapid social change on the village in which it is set, in particular the stress it places on relationships with outsiders.
And Indian writer Amit Chaudhuri explains why, after setting three novels in his native Calcutta, he has turned to non-fiction in his new account of the city. Until 1911 Calcutta was the capital of India and a centre for arts and culture, but is now most associated in the public mind with Mother Theresa - and as a city where children return to take care of ageing parents as Chaudhuri himself has done.
Producer: Hilary Dunn.
Last on
Read the Opening Chapter of Harvest by Jim Crace
Read the Opening Chapter of Calcutta: Two Years in the City by Amit Chaudhuri
Get ahead with Mariella’s next book Instructions for a Heatwave by Maggie O'Farrell
BOOKLIST
Jewish Novel discussion
Howard Jacobson - The Finkler Question
Publisher: Bloomsbury Paperbacks
Howard Jacobson - Kalooki Nights
Publisher: Vintage
Naomi Alderman
The Liars’ Gospel – Naomi Alderman
Publisher: Viking
Disobedience – Naomi Alderman
Publisher: Penguin
David Baddiel
The Death of Eli Gold – David Baddiel
Publisher: Fourth Estate
The Secret Purposes – David Baddiel
Publisher: Abacus
Hope: A Tragedy – Shalom Auslander
Publisher: Picador
Jim Crace
Harvest – Jim Crace
Publisher: Picador
Amit Chaudhuri
Calcutta: Two Years in the City – Amit Chaudhuri
Publisher: Union Books
Broadcasts
- Sun 17 Feb 2013 16:00Â鶹Éç Radio 4 FM
- Thu 21 Feb 2013 15:30Â鶹Éç Radio 4
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