Congratulation to the recipients and to the committee. I know that it is a 
great challenge and a big commitment. I have read The Lost Shtetl. It is an 
excellent choice.
Thanks you to Dan Wyman Books for underwriting the Award.
Amalia W.

From: i...@jewishlibraries.org
Sent: Monday, February 8, 2021 10:30 AM
To: amalia...@att.net
Subject: AJL Announces Award Winners


AJL Announces the Jewish Fiction Award winners
February 8, 2021
The Association of Jewish Libraries Announces the 2021 Winners of the Jewish 
Fiction Award
Max Gross is the winner of the Association of Jewish Libraries (AJL) Jewish 
Fiction Award for his novel The Lost Shtetl, published by HarperVia, an imprint 
of HarperCollins Publishers. The award includes a $1,000 cash prize and support 
to attend the 57th Annual Conference of the Association of Jewish Libraries,  
June 27–July 1, 2021. Two honor books were also recognized: To Be a Man: 
Stories by Nicole Krauss, published by Harper, an imprint of HarperCollins 
Publishers, and Apeirogon: A Novel by Colum McCann, published by Penguin Random 
House. The Committee reviewed over 70 works of fiction originally written in 
English with significant Jewish thematic content published in the United States 
in 2020. Thanks to all those who submitted entries for consideration. The wide 
array of books published in 2020 is a testament to the vibrant state of 
contemporary Jewish fiction.
In many ways Kreskol, the nominal Lost Shtetl, is a typical 19th century Polish 
village. It has the expected mix of competing synagogues and schools; happy and 
miserable families; and comfortable and poor inhabitants. What is surprising 
about Kreskol is that in Brigadoon style, it survived deep in the forests with 
no connection to the outside world. Set during the end of the 20th century,  
Lost Shtetl  tells the story of a town neglected by time, unaware of the 
Holocaust or the creation of the state of Israel. When the Polish government 
“finds” Kreskol, there is massive culture shock on both sides. The Jewish 
villagers must decide how much to embrace the modern world and the Polish 
government has to decide how much they want to invest in this small contentious 
village. “An impressive debut novel, The Lost Shtetl is a thoroughly enjoyable 
story, with lots of humor, but also incredibly sophisticated, clever, poignant 
and thought provoking,” noted Laura Schutzman, Chair of the Award Committee.
The ten stories in To Be a Man by Nicole Krauss deal with the struggle to 
understand what it is to be a man and what it is to be a woman, and all of the 
tensions in the relationships between parents and children, lovers and friends, 
husbands and wives. All contemporary, they span the globe from Switzerland, 
Japan, and New York City to Tel Aviv, Los Angeles, and South America. “Each is 
impactful and memorable with fully developed characters, often wrestling with 
their Jewish identity, who stay with you long after the reading experience is 
over,” commented Rachel Kamin, member of the Award Committee.   
Apeirogon, in telling the story of two fathers, an Israeli and a Palestinian 
united in grief after losing their daughters to the conflict,  weaves together 
fiction and nonfiction, crossing centuries and continents, to create a 
multifaceted and multilayered exploration of history, art, politics, love, 
loss, hope, and the power of storytelling. An apeirogon is a shape with an 
infinitely countable number of sides; Apeirogon, the novel, “evokes a mosaic 
with an infinitely countable number of pieces that have been assembled into a 
beautifully written, emotionally charged, and exceedingly relevant work of 
fiction,” remarked Paula Breger, member of the Award Committee. The intricacies 
and conflicting themes  of Aperigon are sure to elicit much debate and 
discussion.
Laura Schutzman
ajljewishfictionaw...@gmail.com
The AJL Jewish Fiction Award Committee members are Paula Breger, Beth Dwoskin, 
Rachel Kamin, Laura Schutzman, and Sheryl Stahl.
The Association of Jewish Libraries gratefully acknowledges the generous 
support of Dan Wyman Books for underwriting the Award. Submissions for the 2022 
AJL Fiction Award (titles published in 2021) are now being accepted. For more 
information, please visit 
https://urldefense.com/v3/__http://www.jewishlibraries.org__;!!KGKeukY!mAYNrExLi195xEk42RHwHJ2jwxnMLf7c9LWcO4uFJ3jBLzkYFpbhWINgEpymkQQ-JnI$
 .
The Association of Jewish Libraries is an all-volunteer professional 
organization that promotes Jewish literacy through enhancement of libraries and 
library resources and through leadership for the profession and practitioners 
of Judaica librarianship. The Association fosters access to information, 
learning, teaching and research relating to Jews, Judaism, the Jewish 
experience and Israel.
View the complete announcement here: 
https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://jewishlibraries.org/announcements.php?id=93__;!!KGKeukY!mAYNrExLi195xEk42RHwHJ2jwxnMLf7c9LWcO4uFJ3jBLzkYFpbhWINgEpymQnmrNF4$
 


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of Association of Jewish Libraries
P.O. Box 1118
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