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Gabrielle Sher attended Hamilton College, where she earned the Rosenfeld Chapbook Prize for her novella Bowerbird. She received her MFA and PhD in Creative Writing from the University of St. Andrews in Scotland. Her first novel, Odessa, originated as part of her doctoral dissertation titled "Who Made Us Monsters? Narrative Psychology and The Female Jewish Gothic." She currently lives and writes in New Jersey with her husband Jamie and their dog Bo.
Gabrielle Sher's website
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Storytelling is an intrinsic part of Judaism. We mark each holiday by recounting our history, we read from the book of the Torah in Synagogue– we tell and retell the stories of our ancestors. Memory is precious, and the telling of these stories is how we keep our people from disappearing. In a way, writing Odessa was a very Jewish act. But the story my grandmother told me about our family was a difficult one, and my own research into Jewish women's experiences of the pogroms was equally as upsetting. I wanted to write a story that did their suffering justice, but didn't give in to despair.
When I was a child, my grandmother showed me a photo of my ancestor Golda, who escaped pogroms in Eastern Europe and fled to America. She told me a story about a brave young woman who journeyed to unknown lands alone. Golda, in her travel clothes and with a single piece of luggage, remained a glowing, otherworldly figure in my life, but I only had pieces of her. By the time I grew up and decided to write Golda's story, a story I finally understood had hidden dark corners and centuries of buried pain, my grandmother had Parkinson's, and I could only collect the fragments of her memory that remained. Odessa grew from those fragments and ...
Theo of Golden by Allen Levi
One spring morning, a stranger arrives in the small southern city of Golden. No one knows where he has come from…or why…
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