Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Zeruya Shalev

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Zeruya Shalev

Role
  
Author

Spouse
  
Eyal Meged (m. 1993)


Zeruya Shalev The Remains of Love by Zeruya Shalev review Telegraph


Movies
  
Anne Frank: The Untold Story

Books
  
The Remains of Love, Husband and Wife, Thera, Liebesleben, Vie amoureuse

Similar People
  
Meir Shalev, Eyal Megged, Maria Schrader, Mimi Leder, Suki Lahav

Interview with zeruya shalev for hyperliteratura filb 6th edition december 2013


Zeruya Shalev (Hebrew: צרויה שלו‎‎) (born May 13, 1959) is a bestselling Israeli author.

Contents

Zeruya Shalev Erotic Tales Ziegler Film

Zeruya Shalev was born on Kibbutz Kinneret. She has an MA in Bible studies and works as a literary editor at Keshet publishing house. On January 29, 2004, when she was returning to her home in Rehavia, Jerusalem, after taking her child to kindergarten, a Palestinian suicide bomber blew up a city bus as she was passing by. It took her four months to recover from her injuries. Shalev is married to Ayal Megged, son of Aharon Megged. Her cousin is the author Meir Shalev.

Zeruya Shalev wwwbookaholicrowpcontentuploads201211shale

Culturebuzz s hebrew writers readers series zeruya shalev reads from her terra


Literary career

Shalev has published five novels, a book of poetry and a children's book. Her novels Love Life, Husband and Wife, Thera, and The Remains of Love have received critical acclaim both in Israel and abroad. They have been translated into 21 languages and were bestsellers in several countries. Shalev has been awarded the Book Publishers' Association's Gold and Platinum Prizes, the German Corine Literature Prize (2001), the French Amphi Award, and the ACUM prize three times (1997, 2003, 2005). Husband and Wife was nominated for the French Femina prize (2002), and is included in the French Fnac list of the 200 Best Books of the Decade.

The novel Love Life was ranked by the German newspaper Der Spiegel among the twenty best novels of the last forty years, alongside works of Saul Bellow and Philip Roth.

Love Life has also been adapted for the screen as Love Life (German title Liebesleben), a joint 2007 German/Israeli film directed by Maria Schrader.

In 2012, Shalev was awarded the Welt Literaturpreis by the German newspaper Die Welt for her body of work, acclaiming her great magical language.

References

Zeruya Shalev Wikipedia


Similar Topics