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Orly Castel Bloom

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Name
  
Orly Castel-Bloom

Role
  
Author


Education
  
Tel Aviv University

Movies
  
BaTrend

Orly Castel-Bloom wwwwordswithoutbordersorgstaticimagesuploads

Books
  
Dolly city, Human parts, Textile, Minna Lisa: Roman

Similar People
  
Etgar Keret, Ronit Matalon, Yoel Hoffmann, Menashe Noy, Shmuel Yosef Agnon

Cbi s hebrew writers readers series orly castel bloom reads the woman who wanted to kill someone


Orly Castel-Bloom (Hebrew: אורלי קסטל-בלום‎‎) is an Israeli author.

Contents

Orly Castel-Bloom was born in Northern Tel Aviv in 1960, to a family of French-speaking Egyptian Jews. Until the age of three, she had French nannies and spoke only French. She studied film at Tel Aviv University and theater at the Beit Zvi School for the Performing Arts in Ramat Gan.

Castel-Bloom lives in Tel Aviv and has two children. She has lectured at the universites of Harvard, UCLA, Cambridge and Oxford and currently teaches creative writing at Tel Aviv University.

Orly castel bloom human parts


Literary career

Castel-Bloom's first collection of short stories, Not Far from the Center of Town (Lo Rahok mi-Merkhaz ha-Ir), was published in 1987 by Am Oved. She is the author of 11 books, including collections of short fiction and novels. Her 1992 novel Dolly City, has been included in the UNESCO Collection of Representative Works, and in 1999 she was named one of the fifty most influential women in Israel. Dolly City has been performed as a play in Tel Aviv.

In Free Radicals (Radikalim Hofshiyim) published in 2002, Castel-Bloom stopped writing in the first-person. In Human Parts (Halakim Enoshiyim) published in 2002, she was the first Israeli novelist to address the subject of Palestinian suicide bombings. Her anthology of short stories You Don't Argue with Rice, was published in 2003. Castel-Bloom has won the Prime Minister's award twice, the Tel Aviv award for fiction and was nominated for the Sapir Prize for Literature.

Israeli literary critic Gershon Shaked called her a postmodern writer who "communicates the despair of a generation which no longer even dreams the dreams of Zionist history."

Castel-Bloom won the prestigious Sapir Prize for Literature for An Egyptian Novel in 2015.

References

Orly Castel-Bloom Wikipedia