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Interview: Alison Pick

Author's Booker Prize conversion

September 1, 2011 09:43
Researching her novel Far to Go led Alison Pick to convert to Judaism

By

Simon Round,

Simon Round

3 min read

Having a novel nominated for the Man Booker Prize could easily be described as life changing, particularly for a young writer on only her second novel.

However, Canadian author Alison Pick's book, Far to Go, had already changed her life long before the day in July when she discovered that she had made the Booker longlist.

Pick's personal history and that of her father's family are interwoven with the novel, which tells the story of a Czech-Jewish family on the brink of the Holocaust. Although not biographical, the book does echo some of the experiences of the family which left Czechoslovakia for Canada before the onset of the Second World War.

It was a long time brewing - Pick's fascination with her roots stemmed from the day at school as a teenager when she discovered her father was Jewish. "I had no idea until a classmate told me. I asked my dad if it was true and he said it was."

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