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Booked up: judging the JQ Wingate prize

Playwright Amy Rosenthal agreed to judge this year's JQ Wingate Prize. That meant reading 70 books in two months.

February 20, 2017 10:58
Amy Rosenthal

ByAmy Rosenthal, Amy Rosenthal

4 min read

Last year, I wrote a play, Fear Of Cherry Blossom, about inherited fear and the rise of antisemitism (it was more fun than it sounds.) In one scene, the protagonist recalls her traumatised mother’s preoccupation with Jewish literature; her obsessive commitment to reading, to the exclusion of everything and everyone around her. A few weeks after the production, I was invited to be a judge for the Jewish Quarterly Wingate Prize… and I became the very woman I’d created.

The brief for my fellow-judges and myself was to read roughly 70 books (fiction and non-fiction) between August and October, honing our preferences down to a long-list in November and a short-list in January. It felt a formidable task, but my friend Samantha Ellis was a judge last year and still found time to finish a play and write Take Courage, her superb new book on Anne Bronte. So, with trepidation, I said yes. I wanted to learn; to be inspired; to be made to read.

I was a child who swallowed books whole. Theatre was my world and characters in books like Noel Streatfeild’s Ballet Shoes and Meredith Daneman’s Francie and the Boys were my fellow travellers. My all-time heroine was the short-story writer Katherine Mansfield, whose cinematographic eye made me want to write. In my teens I loved D H Lawrence, Rosamond Lehmann and, later, the dynamite prose of Carrie Fisher. But, since starting out as a playwright in 1998, I’ve read more scripts than books and grown accustomed to the brevity of dialogue.

For six months, my flat has looked like a small independent bookshop. Fat tomes squat between sofa cushions, columns of hardbacks serve as coffee tables. I’ve struggled to fit the reading around my own work and at times it’s felt impossible to give each book the focus it deserved. It has also been enlightening. I’ve read astonishing works that I might never have picked up. It’s been a delight to debate with my fellow judges, Professor of Modern Literature Bryan Cheyette, translator and editor Natasha Lehrer, and novelist and travel writer Joanna Kavenna.