(San Francisco, February 9, 2005) – For the first time since its inception seven years ago, the Koret Jewish Book Awards ceremony will be held in San Francisco this year as the centerpiece of a literary arts "mosaic" scheduled April 9 to 12 at the Jewish Community Center of San Francisco (JCCSF).
Awarding $10,000 prizes in fiction, biography, philosophy, history, and – for the first time this year – children's literature, the annual program has been held in New York until now in order to build its reputation among publishers, agents, publicists and writers largely based on the East Coast. Now established as one of the country's most prestigious award programs for Jewish writing, the Koret Foundation is bringing the stellar winners' rosters – which in past years have included Philip Roth, Cynthia Ozick, Daniel Matt, and A.B. Yehoshua, among others – to San Francisco, where they will make public appearances in addition to speaking at the invitation-only awards ceremony scheduled for 7 p.m. on April 11 at JCCSF's Kanbar Theater.
"Our goal is to share the talents of these winning writers with our own Bay Area community, and to encourage our Jewish community to engage with the best of Jewish books produced in the last year," said book awards director Prof. Steven J. Zipperstein, director of the Taube Center for Jewish Studies at Stanford University.
The awards ceremony will also include a program – Faith, Politics, and the Jews: An Exchange Between Hillel Halkin and Anne Roiphe – presenting two leading intellectuals on one of the most contentious and perplexing issues in contemporary culture. Halkin, an Israeli, is a distinguished translator and a frequent contributor to Commentary and The New Republic. He is the author of Letters to an American Jewish Friend, and Across the Sabbath River. Roiphe, a well-known American novelist, wrote Secrets of the City and the widely discussed, fictional exploration of American Jewish Orthodoxy, Lovingkindness.
Book award categories and finalists are:
Biography, Autobiography, and Literary Studies
Biblical Narrative and the Death of the Rhapsode by Robert S.
Kawashima (Indiana University Press)
A Tale of Love and Darkness by Amos Oz, translated
from the Hebrew by Nicolas de Lange (Harcourt, Inc.)
Autobiographical Jews: Essays in Jewish Self-Fashioning by
Michael Stanislawski (University of Washington Press)
Nine Suitcases by Béla Zsolt, translated from the Hungarian
by Ladislaus Löb (Schocken Books)
Children's Literature
Cats in Krasinski Square by Karen Hesse, illustrated by Wendy
Watson (Scholastic Books)
Daniel in the Lions' Den by Jean Marzollo (Little,
Brown)
Baby Babka, the Gorgeous Genius by Jane Breskin Zalben,
illustrated by Victoria Chess (Clarion Books)
Fiction
The Persistence of Memory by Tony Eprile (W. W. Norton &
Company)
Heir to the Glimmering World by Cynthia Ozick (Houghton Mifflin
Company)
The First Desire by Nancy Reisman, (Pantheon Books)
The Plot Against America by Philip Roth (Houghton
Mifflin Company)
History
Mothers and Children: Jewish Family Life in Medieval Europe by
Elisheva Baumgarten (Princeton University Press)
A Jewish Renaissance in Fifteenth-Century Spain by Mark D.
Meyerson (Princeton University Press)
American Judaism by Jonathan D. Sarna (Yale University Press)
Making Jews Modern: The Yiddish and Ladino Press in the
Russian and Ottoman Empires by Sarah Abrevaya Stein (Indiana
University Press)
Philosophy and Thought
Moses Maimonides: The Man and His Works by Herbert A. Davidson
(Oxford University Press)
Wrestling with God and Men: Homosexuality in the Jewish
Tradition by Rabbi Steven Greenberg, (University of Wisconsin
Press)
The Texture of the Divine: Imagination in Medieval Islamic
and Jewish Thought by Aaron W. Hughes (Indiana University
Press)
A special award for translation and commentary will be presented to Robert Alter for his book, The Five Books of Moses, published by W.W. Norton & Company.
Koret also presents an award to a Young Writer (under 40) on Jewish Themes, which includes a $25,000 cash prize and a three-month residency at Stanford University, to write, teach, and conduct research. Finalists for this prize are Hugh Behm-Steinberg, Tim Bradford, Melanie Challenger, Joshua Cohen, Nan Cohen, Lou Cove, Joshua Fagan, Aliza Fogelson, Victoria Häggblom-Arrias, and Adam Langer.
JCCSF's Literary Arts Mosaic includes an intimate evening Saturday, April 9 at 8 p.m. with Daniel Handler (aka Lemony Snicket), one of the most celebrated writers of our time, whose work has exploded onto the silver screen. Handler will discuss what inspires him, what he aspires to, and what makes his writing Jewish.
On Sunday, April 10, JCCSF presents selected Koret Jewish Book Award winners in fields that include biography, fiction, philosophy, history, and children's literature, as well as an emerging young writer on Jewish themes. A brunch-and-learn study session and a special opportunity for young children and their parents are featured events in this day-long inaugural literary arts mosaic.
Both of these events are free and open to the public, though tickets are required.
On Tuesday, April 12, Koret Jewish Book Award winners will visit university Jewish Studies programs, Jewish day schools, Jewish Community Centers, and other venues to be determined.
Since its inception in 1979, the Koret Foundation has awarded more than $282 million in grants focused on a range of areas including education reform and youth development, community and cultural development, and policy analysis that responds to socioeconomic challenges. In addition, Koret has launched a series of initiatives that are revitalizing and strengthening the Bay Area's educational, policymaking, and cultural institutions, as well as the economy in Israel.
Over its first quarter-century, Koret's funding philosophy has evolved from traditional grantmaking to innovative, entrepreneurial approaches to fundamental contemporary issues. Underlying the philosophy of the Koret Foundation has been the vision of founder Joseph Koret, whose unyielding commitment to democracy's freedoms enabled him to achieve the American dream.
For information on the JCCSF Literary Arts Mosaic, please visit www.jccsf.org or call (415) 292-1219. For complimentary tickets to the Saturday evening event, please contact the JCCSF box office at 415.292.1233.
Contact: Director of Communications, Koret Foundation, 415-882-7740