Arnon Grunberg is the author ofBlue Mondays, an international
bestseller that won the Anton Wachter Prize for a debut novel. He
is also the author ofPhantom Pain, whichwon the AKO Prize (the
Dutch equivalent of the Booker). He currently lives in New York
City.
Sam Garrett has won prizes and appeared on short lists for some of
the world's most prestigious literary awards for his translations
of some 30 novels and works of non-fiction.Garrett is the only
translator to have twice won the British Society of Authors' Vondel
Prize for Dutch-English translation (in 2003 and again in 2009). In
2012, his translation ofThe Dinnerby Herman Koch spent two months
on the New York Times bestseller list and became the most popular
Dutch novel ever translated into English. Garrett's translation of
Tim Krabbe'sThe Rideris considered a cycling cult classic.Other
works of his have been short-listed for the International IMPAC
Dublin Literary Award (2005 and 2013), the Oxford-Weidenfeld
Translation Award (2010), the PEN Translation Prize (2014), and the
Best Translated Book Award (2014). He divides his time between
Amsterdam and the French Pyrenees.
"Grunberg rejects self-serving existentialism, confronts real-world
torture, genocide, terrorism, and personal crimes of the heart, and
he infuses his visceral, wily satire with biblical fury."
-Los Angeles Times "Arnon Grunberg is known for writing incendiary
novels, but...The Jewish Messiah pushes his bleak sense of humor
into new realms....Much more than an impolite screed; Grunberg
wants to incite dialogue, not controversy."
- Time Out New York
Mockingly irreverent and verging on the fantastical, Grunberg's satirical comedy featuring a contemporary messiah will amuse some readers and offend others. When Swiss teenager Xavier Radek meets Awromele Michalowitz, a rabbi's son, decides it is his life's mission to "comfort the Jews" to atone for their suffering. Idealistic and naive to the point of foolishness, Xavier is a contemporary version of the Jewish folkloric character Gimpel the Fool. Never mind that his grandfather was a superzealous Nazi, and his mother thinks that "You-Know-Who" had the right idea in exterminating the Jews. Both young men acknowledge the erotic bond between them, first evidenced when Xavier undergoes a botched circumcision. As the action moves from Basel to Amsterdam to Tel Aviv in a series of farcical adventures involving violence, brutality, lust and jealousy, the novel reveals a world made up of bigots and complacent hypocrites. Grunberg's iconoclastic novels are bestsellers in Europe, where they have won numerous literary awards. He has a fine touch for the ridiculous and the macabre, but by the time Xavier becomes the corrupt prime minister of Israel and metamorphoses into a modern Hitler, this abrasive satire becomes an open wound. (Jan.) Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information.
"Grunberg rejects self-serving existentialism, confronts real-world
torture, genocide, terrorism, and personal crimes of the heart, and
he infuses his visceral, wily satire with biblical fury."
-Los Angeles Times "Arnon Grunberg is known for writing
incendiary novels, but...The Jewish Messiah pushes his bleak
sense of humor into new realms....Much more than an impolite
screed; Grunberg wants to incite dialogue, not controversy."
- Time Out New York
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