I’m beyond excited to announce that I’m the winner of not just one, but two incredibly prestigious awards. How that happened I honestly don’t know. I’m not being facetious. There are certain things that I expected from publishing my novel, some of which happened and some of which didn’t. But these two awards weren’t something I expected. Which makes it all the more rewarding.
First off, Your Presence Is Mandatory won the California Book Award for First Fiction! Given that this book takes place very far from California and the huge number of amazing books that come out from California authors, I was really surprised and hugely honored. This is the 94th year of the awards and is organized by the Commonwealth Club. The winner for Fiction category (not first, but general) is Percival Everett for James, with the silver medal going to Rachel Kushner for Creation Lake, both tremendous novels.
Please join me for the virtual ceremony on Monday, June 23 6-7pm PST.
On the same week, I found out that I’m the winner of the Sami Rohr Prize for Jewish Literature! This annual prize, given on alternate years to fiction and nonfiction works, came as an even bigger shock because there is no nomination process for this award, so I didn’t even know I was in consideration. The ceremony was supposed to be in Jerusalem in early July, but obviously everything got rearranged, so now the ceremony will take place in New York on September 3 (more details to come).
I’m tremendously grateful to judges - all deep lovers of books - for appreciating and recognizing what I tried to do with my book. I feel like it gave Your Presence added literary legitimacy and I hope this recognition will lead to more readers discovering this book.
What I’m Reading
Fiction: Endling by Maria Reva is a novel I’ve long looked forward to reading. It’s an absurdist story of three Ukrainian women, a snail, and a truck full of foreign bachelors. Reva was working on it before the full-scale invasion began and it altered the book in incredibly interesting ways. Don’t miss it.
Nonfiction: Our Dear Friends in Moscow by Andrei Soldatov & Irina Borogan, a couple of exiled Russian journalists who track how their friends fell into working for Putin propaganda machine.
On my nightstand: The Night Sparrow by Shelly Sanders (we’re doing an event together in SF on July 17) about a female sniper in the Red Army.
I hope you’re taking occasional breaks from the world’s craziness. My heart goes out to friends & their loved ones in Ukraine, Israel and Iran.