Archive for the ‘Books’ Category

Many thanks everyone for entering the Winehouse v Cowell competition. I’ve selected a winner in each camp. So congratulations to ‘Henry’ for winning the Winehouse book and ‘Beny’ for winning the Cowell one. I’ll be in touch to arrange delivery. There will be a new competition very soon.

I’m going to take a few days off from blogging, so I thought I’d leave you with a quick round-up of recent posts you might have missed:

Firstly, have a read about Boycott Israel Campaign’s ugly protest. Am I right to be suspicious of the timing?

Also, what is the maddest thing anyone has ever said to you about Israel? Do share!

On a happier note, this is what I’ll be doing during Rosh Hashanah.

Speaking of which, I wish all my Jewish readers Shana Tova.

I’ll be back…

jwordBack in March I wrote about the brilliant novel The J-Word and interviewed its author Andrew Sanger. It truly is a fantastic book and I really recommend it to you all. You can read that post here.

Andrew is speaking at the Hampstead & Highgate Literary Festival next week. The event is at lunchtime on Monday September 14. You can book tickets here and then start planning what you’re going to eat at Solly’s afterwards.* ‘Citing!

Speaking of ‘citing, Andrew has agreed to give away a personally signed copy of The J-Word through this very blog. All you have to do is leave a ‘pick me’ comment on this post before the end of play Friday. I will pick the winner randomly.

* Lamb shawarma, surely?

ccThe Simon Cowell biography promo fun continues! Following the reviews, diary page plugs and radio appearances of the last few days, I was interviewed today on the blog of the wonderful Caroline Smailes. She’s given the book a great review and in the interview I managed to work in references to Mossad, Chabad and Starbucks among other things.

There’s plenty more coming up. I’m doing something  like 20 radio interviews on Thursday, Friday, Saturday and next Monday. There’s also talk of a leading womens’ magazine running a chunky extract and lots more besides.

By the way Caroline Smailes’ novel In Search Of Adam is fantastic and very moving. Check it out here.

My biographies of Simon Cowell and Michael Jackson are published next week. Then the following week my Gunners Lists book hits the shelves. (I actually have six new books published over the next nine weeks.) The Sunday papers have covered the Cowell biography wonderfully. The News Of The World reviewer gave it four out of five, which is really pleasing. The Independent On Sunday diary page did its second story in three weeks on the book, focusing this time on my interview with Julie Burchill.

The busy promotional campaign for the Cowell book continues tomorrow when I do a newspaper review and interview on BBC Radio London, the first of something like 20 radio interviews I am doing next week. I will also be speaking to a few magazines and blogs. Meanwhile, the book is rising up the chart in WHSmiths and other shops. It’s winning Amazon’s Judges Joust (a face-off they set-up between my biog of Cowell and the brilliant Sean Smith’s one of Cheryl Cole).

As it this isn’t all brilliant enough, I’ve decided that The Cowell’s decision to do the opening X Factor auditions in front of arena audiences was a stroke of genius from the clever so-and-so. I didn’t enjoy it last week but after last night’s show I am definitely won over. Watching Jamie Archer’s ‘Sex On Fire’ audition made it all click into place, especially seeing The Cowell let himself go and join in the singing along.

Good times!

Remember when I interviewed author Andrew Sanger about his unforgivably brilliant novel The J-Word? Well, you can see the man himself in discussion at the forthcoming Hampstead & Highgate Literary Festival. The event is at lunchtime on Monday September 14. You can book tickets here and then start planning what you’re going to eat at Solly’s afterwards. If you haven’t read The J-Word yet, buy it at once or I’ll never speak to you again.

I’ve just received an exciting book commission with a very tight deadline. So I might not be posting quite as regularly during July. In the meantime, I am on BBC Radio Berkshire this lunchtime discussing the aforementioned book.

Welcome to the blogosphere, CST.

These are busy times for me (not least putting the finishing touches to this little baby) but I will be back very soon with a proper post. I’m attending an event on Friday which I am expecting to be fertile ground for an Oy Va Goy special. So watch this space.

Meanwhile, Facebook users might like to join my ever-growing group I’m British And I Love Israel. See you there.

I was interested to read this news story about Shifra Shomron’s novel Grains Of Sand: The Fall of Neve Dekalim, which follows the fortunes of an Israeli family living in Gush Katif in the run-up to the 2005 disengagement. I recommend you read Shomron’s book – it’s a beautifully written, riveting work. Amazingly, Shomron was 19 when she wrote it. She’s a great talent and I look forward to reading her future work.

sh4

I’m a great admirer of Daniel Gordis. He has written several eloquent books about life in Israel. His most recent book, Saving Israel, is a less personal but more passionate read, and I reviewed it here.

savI am delighted that Daniel has agreed to be interviewed for Oy Va Goy. We talked about his work, the threat of Iran, the settlements, his views on Barack Obama and his plans for future books.

CNB: So much discussion of Israel focuses on protection against external threats. In Saving Israel you also focus on internal opportunities to strengthen the Jewish state. What has the reaction been in Israel to the book?

DG: As Saving Israel has thus far appeared only in English, the reaction among Israeli readers has thus far been primarily among the English-reading Israeli public.  Among these readers, the reaction has been extremely positive, I’m happy to report.  Book launches have been sold out to standing room only crowds.  And numerous people, pleased to see that someone is finally speaking about the purpose of Israel and not simply the daily external threats that the Jewish state faces, have been urging me to have the book translated into Hebrew.  I’m currently exploring that possibility and am preparing to approach a few publishers with the idea.

CNB: Saving Israel, while personal in parts, is a lot less personal than some of your previous work. Have you plans to publish more personal books in the future?

DG: A great question. The personal dimension of If a Place Can Make You Cry, Home to Stay and, most recently, Coming Together, Coming Apart afforded me a way of making the challenges of daily life in Israel a bit more understandable to those who don’t live here, and I’m grateful for all the response to those books.  Yet moving away from the personal, as I’ve done in Saving Israel and as I plan to do in the next book I’m writing (about how Israel is giving new life to the idea of the nation-state) allows me to make points that are not related specifically to me or my family.  Now that my children are getting older and are approaching adulthood, I have to be more circumspect about I write about my family.  But I’m aware of the power of the form of the memoir, and I’d be surprised if I didn’t return to it at some point in the future.

CNB: Which of your previous books are you most fond of?

DG: As God Was Not in the Fire was my first book, I think that I’ll always have a warm spot in my heart for that work.  I’m pleased that almost fifteen years since it first appeared, people are still reading it and are still writing to me with responses to it.  That’s very gratifying.  Of all the memoirs, I like If a Place Can Make You Cry the best (Home to Stay is an updated version of that), perhaps because I really like the title, which very much sums up part of Israel’s mysterious and magical pull on me and on so many of us.  And finally, I’m happy with Saving Israel.  It’s my first (but not last) venture into confronting issues about the purpose of Israel, which is a topic we don’t discuss enough.  If I had to pick three, those would probably be them.

CNB: Through your writing you are already an extraordinary international ambassador for Israel. Would you consider taking on such a role more formally one day?

DG: I don’t imagine that that would ever happen, but I think that all of us, regardless of what abilities we have, have an obligation to serve the countries in which we believe, in whatever capacity we’re asked to serve.  I’m always looking for new ways to serve this country which is not only my home, but my homeland as well.

CNB: Is Barack Obama good or bad for Israel?

DG: It remains to be seen, but initial signs are worrisome.  To be sure, Israel’s new government has made some serious tactical errors in dealing with the new American administration, and has needlessly provoked a clash when the same points could have been made much more adroitly.  And Israel could well benefit from a United States with a restored international standing, which Obama is seeking to create.  In those regards, some of Obama’s new policies are thoroughly understandable.  But in linking support for Israel to the solution to the Palestinian problem (which Israel has tried to solve, to no avail), Obama has linked two issues that he certainly understands need not be linked.  And when his administration calls for the dismantling of illegal settlements (which I’m in favor of dismantling, because they’re illegal, and Israel should be governed by the rule of law) in order to “give hope to Palestinian youth,” one wonders – is their loss of hope our doing, or the doing of the leadership they have elected and continue to endorse?

Does President Obama recognize that what a settlement with the Palestinians will require is primarily not concessions on Israel’s side (though those are necessary and inevitable), but more importantly, a thoroughly changed attitude among Palestinians, who have yet to recognize Israel’s right to exist as a Jewish state, and have yet to foreswear violence and terrorism?  When that changes, we’ll have a shot at peace.  Does Obama get that?  I think the jury is still out.

CNB: We have seen the extraordinary morality and restraint that Israel shows in the face of threats both external and internal. To what extent do you believe that Israel will have to take off the gloves in order to survive?

DG: As the father of one former Israeli soldier and a son who is now in the army, I’m deeply proud of the values, commitments and senses of right and wrong which are at the core of these young people and the work that they do in the military.  But they know that the one thing that Israel cannot compromise on is its security.  If Hamas is going to use Palestinian civilians as human shields, as we know they did and do, Palestinian civilians are going to die, tragic as that is.  And if Hamas leadership is going to hide in mosques, schools and hospitals, as we know they do, those buildings are going to have to be destroyed.  Every other country would do exactly that – it’s only with regard to Israel that the world is aghast when such things happen.  No one notices all the targets that Israel avoids because of these sickening tactics on the part of Hamas.  The world notices only the targets that are selected, which are very few and far between.

The same is true with Iran.  Why would Israel seek a conflict with Iran?  And why would our sons and daughters seek to harm an Iranian civilian thousands of kilometers away from us?  But if Iran pursues its goal of obtaining a nuclear weapon even as it calls for the destruction of the Jewish state, is it moral to risk the lives of (another) six million Jews living in Israel, and to wait idly by while our enemies prepare to destroy us (again)?  I do not believe that Israel will let that happen.  And if and when Israel strikes, responsibility will lie not with the IDF, but with the international community, which for years has cynically allowed the Iranians to progress while only pretending to impose sanctions on Iran.

Countries have obligations, first and foremost, to defend their citizens.  What other country would watch a sworn enemy prepare to destroy it and do nothing?  Why should Israel be expected to adopt that absurd posture?

Thank you to Daniel Gordis. You can visit his website here.

You can now read the Israel chapter I wrote in Not In My Name here.

I hope you enjoy it.

Nice to see Look magazine give my newly-published, updated Amy Winehouse biography – now officially an international bestseller – four out of five stars, describing it as “gripping”.

Now available in paperback all good shops, folks!

Winehouse PB Cover(Blake) 130X198

ged2I’ve been doing the rounds on BBC radio discussing my book Great Email Disasters, off the back of the Damian McBride email scandal.

This morning I did the Breakfast Show on BBC Radio London and the Henry Kelly Show on BBC Radio Berkshire.

You can listen to my BBC Radio London interview here. I think I did well considering I was fast asleep a few minutes before I went on air.

I am due on BBC Three Counties Radio tomorrow morning at 9.40am.

I see the BBC are planning an adaptation of Money by Martin Amis. I’ve always been a big Amis fan, though I prefer his first three novels to his more recent ones. And his memoir Experience is glorious.

I’ve noticed that during interviews – including one about Money - he often describes things as “sort of everything and nothing”. So when I got the chance to interview the great man some years back about his nuclear war fiction, I told friends I reckoned he would say his favourite phrase to me.

On the day, I opened the interview thus:

Me: “So, Martin, how difficult is it to write about nuclear war?”

Him: “It is difficult. Nuclear weapons – they’re sort of everything and nothing, aren’t they?”

Jackpot!

Not In My Name: A Compendium Of Modern Hypocrisy is published in paperback this week. Here are some of the reviews from when it was published in hardback last summer:

notinmynamepb8‘A spirited attack’ – Nick Cohen, The Observer

‘Waspish and witty’ – Daily Mail

‘Privileged celebs get a vicious tongue-lashing’ – The Sun

‘Absolutely brilliant – this is a fabulous, clear-eyed book that will frequently make you laugh out loud’ – Jewish Chronicle

‘Burchill and Newkey-Burden are spot on’ – Gay Times

‘They write like Old Testament prophets’ – Church Times

‘At their entertaining best they skewer the worst sort of leftist poseurs’ – Arena

‘A majestic piece of work’ – Sunday Mercury

‘Piercing intelligence’ – Royal Borough Observer

‘Enjoyable…everything from anal sex to Israel and Amy Winehouse”‘ – Australian Literary Review

‘A feverish anthology’ – Word magazine

I was particularly pleased with the Jewish Chronicle review, and its praise for my Israel essay: ‘Where has Newkey-Burden been all my life? He’s every bit as entertaining as Burchill. His essay on Israel haters made me ache with gratitude. I had tears streaming down my face as I turned the pages. Because he’s right, of course.’

You can read that review in full here.

…when you can have four?

Ladies and gentlemen, I give you my next four releases, all published next month:

Amy Winehouse: The Biography (updated paperback)

Alexandra Burke: Hallelujah, A Star Is Born

The Dog Directory

Not In My Name: A Compendium Of Modern Hypocrisy (paperback)

Phew…

© Copyright Chas Newkey-Burden. All Rights Reserved. Thanks to Chris Morris.