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The Slaughterman's Daughter

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Wikipedia article




'The Slaughtermans Daughter' is the English-language title of 'Tikkun Ahar Hatzot' ('An After Midnight Prayer', ), an epic historical adventure novel written in a fabulist style about a Jewish community in a provincial Belarusian town which takes the reader through the corridors of power, people and history of 19th century Belarus".

It was written by Israeli writer Yaniv Iczkovits in Hebrew and first published in Jerusalem in 2015. It was translated into English by Orr Scharf and first published as such in 2020.

Plot



It is 1894, and many Jews are emigrating from the Russian Empire to the United States, Germany, and Palestine; the story is set in motion by one husband and father who abandons his family.

The townsfolk of Motal, a Belarusian town in the Pale of Settlement, are shocked when Fanny Keismann - devoted wife, mother of five, and celebrated cheese-maker - leaves her home and vanishes into the night. Such behavior was fairly common for men but never before had a woman done so. Fanny's reputation indicated she might be capable of unconventional deeds. Thus do the events of the story unfold.

Background



Motal is a small town in South-Western Belarus with a rich and tragic Jewish history. It is the birthplace of a number of famous Jews, including Chaim Weizmann, the first president of Israel.

The first records about the Jewish community go back to 17th century. According to the 1806 census, there were 152 Jews in Motal and by 1897 its Jewish population had climbed to 1,354 Jews, comprising 32% of the total population. The majority of Jews lived on small-scale trade and craft. Small industry started to develop in Motal at the end of the 19th century with the establishment of two candle workshops, three smithies, a mill, and butter factory. There were two synagogues in the town and a 'heder'.

During World War II the area was occupied by Nazi forces that perpetrated mass executions of local Jews.

Development



When Iczkovits wrote 'The Slaughtermans Daughter' he didnt want to visit Belarus I wanted to sketch these lost worlds from my imagination and support the story with thorough historical research. I thought that if I travelled there, I would find a totally different world with no Jews, no Shtetls, just a standard Eastern European country with one Jewish museum and a desolate synagogue. However, one month before the book was supposed to be printed in Israel, he decided he needed to do some fact-checking and travelled to Belarus.

He didnt have high expectations for the journey knowing that the world today is entirely different from what it was in the 19th century. However, when he saw a boat on the Yaselda river it perfectly matched [his] vision of Zizeks boat and Iczkovits realised that maybe the old world and our world are not so very different and that he was not just following the protagonists of his book [but] might actually meet them.

Publishing history



Translations

* Italian: 'Tikkun: o la vendetta di Mende Speismann per mano della sorella Fanny' (2018) Vicenza: Neri Pozza. transl: Ofra Bannet

* Dutch: 'De slachtersdochter' (2019) Amsterdam: De Geus. transl: Hilde Pach

* English: 'The Slaughterman's Daughter: a novel' (American edition: 2021) New York: Schocken Books. transl: Orr Scharf

* Polish: 'Crka rzenika' (2021) Pozna: Wydawnictwo Poznaskie. transl: Anna Halbersztat

* Romanian: 'Fiica mcelarului' (2022) HUMANITAS. transl: Ioana Petridean

* Serbian: 'Koljaeva ki' (2022) Dereta Knjige

Awards and nominations



Awards

* 2015 Funding from the Israeli Ministry of Culture and Sport's "People of the Book" award for translation of Hebrew literature into foreign languages, for 'The Slaughterman's Daughter"

* 2016 The Ramat Gan Prize for Literature awarded for "literary excellence in the original novel category" for 'The Slaughterman's Daughter

* 2016 Inaugural award of the Agnon Prize for the Literary Arts, for 'The Slaughterman's Daughter'

* 2021 The Jewish Quarterly-Wingate Prize for 'The Slaughterman's Daughter'

Shortlisted

* 2017 'The Slaughterman's Daughter': shortlisted for the Sapir Prize

Reviewers' notable mention for 'The Slaughterman's Daughter'

* 2020 'The Economist' - among the eight "Books of the Year" list

*2020 'The Times' - among the ten "Books of the Year"

* 2021 'Kirkus Reviews' - "One of the 10 fiction books to look forward to in 2021"

* 2021 'Publishers Weekly' - "Best Books"

'The Slaughterman's Daughter' reviewed by the major press

* 2021 'The Wall Street Journal' - "Fiction: In Memory of Memory Review"

* 2021 'The New York Times' - "Chasing Down a Deadbeat Dad, With a Knife Strapped to Her Leg"

References



Category:Israeli literature

Category:Hebrew-language literature

Category:Books about Belarus

Category:Books about Jews and Judaism

Category:2015 novels

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