Yaakov Shabtai

Yaakov Shabtai
Native name יעקב שבתאי
Born 1934
Tel Aviv, Mandate Palestine
Died 1981
Occupation Novelist, playwright, and translator
Awards

Yaakov Shabtai (1934–81) (Hebrew: יעקב שבתאי) was an Israeli novelist, playwright, and translator.

Biography

Shabtai was born in 1934 in Tel Aviv, Mandate Palestine. In 1957, after completing military service, he joined Kibbutz Merhavia, but returned to Tel Aviv in 1967.[1]

His best known work is Zikhron Devarim (1977), published in English in 1985 as Past Continuous. Written as a single paragraph, it was the first novel to be written in vernacular Hebrew. In its English translation the novel received international acclaim as a unique work of modernism, prompting critic Gabriel Josipovici of The Independent to name it the greatest novel of the decade, comparing it to Proust's In Search of Lost Time.

In Israel, Shabtai is known as a playwright, having written the plays Crowned Head and The Spotted Tiger. He translated many plays into Hebrew, including works by Harold Pinter, Neil Simon, Noël Coward and Eugene O'Neill. Other works by Shabtai include Uncle Peretz Takes Off, a collection of short stories, and Past Perfect (Sof Davar), a continuation of Past Continuous in terms of narrative and style, published posthumously. In 2006 a collection of early stories was published under the title A Circus in Tel Aviv.

Shabtai died of a heart attack in 1981.

Shabtai's brother Aharon is a poet and a translator from Ancient Greek.

Awards and honours

Published works

Works Translated into English

Other works

References

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