Arnold Zable

Arnold Zable (born 1947) is an Australian writer, novelist, storyteller and human rights advocate. His books include the memoir Jewels and Ashes, three novels: Café Scheherazade, Scraps of Heaven, and Sea of Many Returns, two collections of stories: The Fig Tree and Violin Lessons, and The Fighter. His most recent book, The Watermill, was published in March 2020.

Life

Zable was born on 10 January 1947 in Wellington, New Zealand to Polish-Jewish refugee parents.[1] They moved early in his life to Australia and he grew up in Carlton, Victoria.

Themes and style

Zable is known as a storyteller — through his memoirs, short stories and novels. Australian critic Susan Varga says that Zable's award-winning memoir, Jewels and Ashes, "was a ground-breaking book in Australia, one of the first of what has since become a distinct auto/biographical genre: a second-generation writer returns to the scene of unspeakable crimes to try to understand a fraught and complex legacy, and, in so doing, embarks on a journey into the self."[2]

In an interview Zable explained that the rights and experiences of refugees and asylum seekers underpins his work:

The current generation of refugees are experiencing the intense challenges faced by previous generations. We tend to forget, or fail to imagine, how difficult it is to start life anew far from the homeland. We forget also that nostalgia, the longing for the return to homeland, is a deep and enduring aspect of the refugee experience.[3]

In the same interview he said about his language that "I am drawn to the quirky sayings and observations that define a person or a culture".[3]

Awards and nominations

  • 1991: National Book Council Lysbeth Cohen Award for Jewels and Ashes[4]
  • 1991: Ethnic Affairs Commission Award for Jewels and Ashes[4]
  • 1992: FAW ANA Literature Award for Jewels and Ashes[4]
  • 1992: Braille Book of the Year Award for Jewels and Ashes[4]
  • 1992: Talking Book of the Year award for Jewels and Ashes[4]
  • 2001: Shortlisted New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards for fiction for Cafe Scheherazade
  • 2003: People's Choice Award, Tasmanian Pacific Fiction Prize for Cafe Scheherazade
  • 2004: National Folk Recording Award for The Fig Tree
  • 2010: Nominated for The International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award for Sea of Many Returns
  • 2013: The Victorian Council for Civil Liberties Voltaire Award
  • 2015: Life membership, Writers Victoria
  • 2016: Shortlisted, The Victorian Premier's Literary Awards for 'The Fighter'
  • 2016: Shortlisted, The New South Wales Literary awards for 'The Fighter'
  • 2017: The Australia Council Fellowship for Literature
  • 2020: Shortlisted, Queensland Literary Awards, Nonfiction Book Award, for The Watermill[5]

Bibliography

Books

YearTitleImprintISBN
1982Clown BoyOxford University PressISBN 0195543777
The River ManISBN 0195543831
1991Jewels and AshesScribeISBN 0908011202
1998Wanders and Dreamers: Tales of the David Herman TheatreHyland HouseISBN 1864470615
2001Cafe ScheherazadeText PublishingISBN 187648571X
2002The Fig TreeISBN 1877008230
2004Scraps of HeavenISBN 1877008869
2008Sea of Many ReturnsISBN 9781921351532
2011Violin LessonsISBN 9781921758478
2012Lygon St, Little Bourke St, Lonsdale St.: The Vibrant History of Melbourne's Italian, Chinese and Greek Cultural Precincts: Stories From the Heart of MelbourneCity of MelbourneOCLC 828643946
2016The FighterText PublishingISBN 9781925355062
2020The WatermillISBN 9781922268556

Critical studies and reviews of Zable's work

Violin lessons
gollark: See, this would be much nicer in R U S T (praise).
gollark: BF interpreter using some sort of partly-on-disk key/value store by sharding memory into large chunks?
gollark: No idea, never came up for me.
gollark: If you're deserializing into a defined data structure instead of something more like a syntax tree, it can just reject those.
gollark: No idea. I don't think I've ever needed or seen that honestly?

References

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