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Memoir of late refugee from Nazi Germany wins JQ Wingate literary prize for 2019

The rediscovered work, 'No Place to Lay One’s Head', by Françoise Frenkel was first printed in 1945

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The JQ Wingate literary prize for 2019 has been awarded to the rediscovered memoir of the late Jewish bookseller Françoise Frenkel, who escaped Berlin for France in 1939, before fleeing for Switzerland.

Described as "a found treasure… filled with wisdom and hope", No Place to Lay One’s Head was first printed as part of a limited run in 1945. It was then forgotten until it was rediscovered in a car boot sale in southern France and republished in 2015. Its English version, translated by Stephanie Smee, was published in 2018, 43 years after the author’s death.

This year’s judging panel comprised past JQ Wingate Literary Prize winner Thomas Harding together with bestselling children’s author Francesca Simon; JHub Director and JDOV founder Shoshana Boyd Gelfand and critic and literary editor Arifa Akbar.

Chair of judges Shoshana Boyd Gelfand said: No Place to Lay One’s Head captured our hearts on so many levels. First of all, it is the memoir of an extraordinary woman who set up the first French-language bookshop in Berlin soon after the First World War. This in itself would have made her a fascinating character and her story worth reading.

“Françoise Frenkel’s memoir was originally published in French in 1945 and then forgotten in the post-war haze. Only recently was a copy discovered by chance and translated to English. So this is not only a redemptive story of refugees and fleeing terror, but also a reminder that books too can cross borders and speak to new generations, if only they fall into the hands of those to whom the book is dedicated: men and women of good will.”

The winner was announced at an event at the JW3 Jewish community centre this evening, with the 2019 judging panel discussing the significance of a specifically Jewish prize, and the joys, challenges and considerations of judging it. The BBC’s Emily Kasriel chaired the event.

Ms Boyd Gelfand told the JC that the shortlist “leaned heavily towards fiction”, however it was a non-fiction book that won the £4,000 prize, previously awarded to Amos Oz, Zadie Smith and Oliver Sacks. 

Speaking on behalf of Françoise Frenkel, publisher of Pushkin Press Adam Freudenheim said: "I’m delighted that her memoir, penned shortly after her dramatic escape from Vichy, France, to Switzerland during WWII, has received this year’s JQ Wingate Prize. It is also a testament to Stephanie Smee’s fine translation, which allows it to reach a worldwide readership.  

“Frenkel’s passion for books and for literature but above all for life is an inspiration to all of us, now more than ever.”


 

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