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Film

‘People assume I’m not Jewish. It hurts’

Young Adult author Becky Albertalli's debut novel has been made into a Hollywood hit film. It's a story which draws on her Jewish upbringing

March 28, 2018 08:52
1

ByKeren David, Keren David

1 min read

A few years ago, I read a debut Young Adult novel by an American author. It was so good authentic, funny, heartwarming, well-plotted that as soon as I’d finished I started reading it all over again.

The author was Becky Albertalli, and her book Simon vs the Homosapien Agenda (Puffin) has now been made into a film, Love, Simon released in the UK next week. It’s the story of a teenage boy who knows he’s gay and is happy about it, apart from the tricky business of coming out. He starts writing to an anonymous classmate who is having similar experiences and slowly falls in love without having much of a clue whom he loves and whether they feel the same. This sounds contrived, but Albertnalli’s skill is such that every bit rings true.

Now the Atlanta-based author has had the surreal experience of meeting her characters on set. She’s very happy with the finished product “I’ve seen it ten times” and assures me that the screenwriters have been “very, very faithful” to the original plot-line and message, one which encourages LGBT+ teens to have the courage to stand up to bullying and be open about who they are.

In a way that chimes with her experience of being Jewish — as, since getting married and taking her husband’s name, “most people don’t seem to know that I am Jewish.” This, for someone who grew up with a more recognisably Jewish name, a member of the Reform community in Atlanta, is a novel experience. She compares herself with other American YA writers, “they get a lot of antisemitism from online trolls”. That doesn’t happen to her. Instead she has been criticised or her characters do for “not being Jewish enough” such as when one boy throws a party on Shabbat.