![]() |
||||
| learn more at: www.pbs.org/moyers | ||||
David Grossman is an Israeli novelist, essayist, playwright, and children's book author who has written extensively on Israeli-Palestinian relations and whose fictional works mine the depths youth, adolescence, and adulthood in modern Israeli society. He was nominated for the Nobel Prize in literature in 1984.. "I think this is our duty, and our pleasure to go and to decode it and to find the nuances and the silences between these words. And to write our stories into the story of the Bible." --David GrossmanGrossman's novels include THE SMILE OF THE LAMB (1983), SEE UNDER: LOVE (1986), THE BOOK OF INTIMATE GRAMMAR (1991), THE ZIG-ZAG KID (1994), BE MY KNIFE (1998), SOMEONE TO RUN WITH (2000), and HER BODY KNOWS (2004). Grossman is well known for his nonfiction and has authored several groundbreaking journalistic works on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. These include 1987's THE YELLOW WIND (called by the Los Angeles Times "the most honest, soul-searching book yet written by an Israeli" on the conflict), SLEEPING ON A WIRE: CONVERSATIONS WITH PALESTINIANS IN ISRAEL (1992), and DEATH AS A WAY OF LIFE: FROM OSLO TO THE GENEVA AGREEMENT (2003). Grossman's work has been translated into 25 languages and he has received numerous international awards for his writing, including the Premio Grinzane, the Premio Mondelo, the Valumbrosa Prize, and the Vittorio de Sica Prize (Italy); the Marsh Award for Childlren's Literature in Translation (Britain); the Buxtehuder Bulle (Germany); and the Prix Eliette Von Karajan (Austria). He holds the rank of Chevalier de l'Ordre des Artes et des Lettres in France.
Grossman continues to write frequently on Israeli culture and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict for the European and American press. His most recent novel, LOVERS AND STRANGERS, was published in August 2005.
|
||||
|
||||