Project Description
Sephardic CycleRichard Zimler
Portugal / USA
Richard Zimler has a master’s degree in journalism from Stanford University. He has published 10 novels over the last 19 years, including the international bestsellers, THE LAST KABBALIST OF LISBON and THE WARSAW ANAGRAMS. His novels have been translated into 23 languages and have won several prestigious awards, including the 2009 Alberto Benveniste Prize for the best work of Jewish-themed fiction published in France. Four of Zimler’s novels – THE LAST KABBALIST OF LISBON, HUNTING MIDNIGHT, GUARDIAN OF THE DAWN and THE SEVENTH GATE – form his “Sephardic Cycle”, a group of inter-connected novels about different branches and generations of a Portuguese Jewish family. Five of his novels have been nominated for the International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award, including his most recent, THE NIGHT WATCHMAN. Each novel of the “Sephardic Cycle” was a number 1 bestseller in Portugal. Zimler has lectured on kabbalah and Sephardic history at universities, cultural centers, synagogues and bookshops in London, Paris, Sydney, New York and many other cities. Film rights for his bestselling novel THE LAST KABBALIST OF LISBON have now been purchased by the head of Cinemate (“Night Train to Lisbon”). The director will be Academy-award winner Bille August. Zimler’s novel THE WARSAW ANAGRAMS has sold over 70,000 copies in the USA and the UK. When he’s not writing or traveling, he enjoys gardening at his weekend house in the north of Portugal.
Visit also the author’s website: > zimler.com
»Zimler is an honest, powerful writer.«
The Guardian
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The Village of Vanished Souls
The Village of Vanished Souls (“A Aldeia das Almas Desaparecidas”) is a moving and gripping novel divided into two volumes, in which Richard Zimler retraces the Zarco family and explores the devastating effects of religious intolerance in Castelo Rodrigo and surrounding villages. Using real names, dates of arrest and other details about the villagers who were seized by the Inquisition, he presents the reader with an exhaustive piece of research that makes this work a masterful novel and an unrivalled testimony. Love, betrayal, sacrifice, and courage coexist in this gripping novel, a unique account of the horrors of the Inquisition that elevates Richard Zimler to the podium of the greatest storytellers.
It is the year 1671 and in The Village of Vanished Souls I (“A Aldeia das Almas Desaparecidas I”) Isaaque Zarco, a nine-year-old boy, leads a quiet existence in the peaceful village of Castelo Rodrigo. However, not even this remote corner in the north of Portugal escapes the shadow of a powerful evil force, which insidiously spreads through a hitherto peaceful population. And soon, with the mysterious disappearance of a family friend and the murder of a neighbour, the pillars that had sustained Isaaque’s world begin to crumble, putting his own life at risk. Grandmother Flor, an old Castilian midwife and healer, reveals to him something that nobody had dared to tell him: that he and his family are secret Jews – and therefore subject to accusations and imprisonment.
The Village of the Vanished Souls II (“A Aldeia das Almas Desaparecidas II”), where he resumes his work as a tailor’s assistant and takes an even more active part in the services of the city’s clandestine synagogue. The peacefulness of his days, however, is interrupted when, at the age of seventeen, he receives a letter from Flor’s adopted daughter, Sálvia, informing him that the old healer has been arrested by the Inquisition. Isaaque then finds himself immersed in a perfidious world full of betrayals, which culminate in the terrifying auto-da-fé of Madrid in 1680. Worst of all, he learns that, under torture, the old healer has denounced two other friends as secret Jews. Will he be able to save them, at the risk of being arrested?
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The Incandescent Threads
Benjamin Zarco and his cousin Shelly are the only two members of their family to survive the Holocaust. In the decades since, each man has learned, in his own unique way, to carry the burden of having outlived all the others, while ever wondering why he was spared.
Saved by a kindly piano teacher who hid him as a child, Benni suppresses the past entirely and becomes obsessed with studying kabbalah in search of the ‘Incandescent Threads’, the nearly invisible fibres that he believes link everything in the universe across space and time. Meanwhile, Shelly – devastatingly handsome, charming and exuberantly bisexual – comes to believe that pleasures of the flesh are his only escape, and takes every opportunity to indulge his desires. That is, until he begins a relationship with a profoundly traumatised Canadian soldier and artist who helped to liberate Bergen-Belsen, and who might be a connexion with his lost family in Europe.
Across six non-linear mosaic pieces, we move from a Poland decimated by World War II to modern-day New York and Boston, hearing friends and relatives of Benni and Shelly tell of the deep influence of the beloved cousins on their lives. For within these intimate testimonies may lie the key to why they were saved and the unique bond that unites them. The Incandescent Threads is the latest in his Sephardic Cycle, an acclaimed group of independent works that explore the lives of different branches and generations of a Portuguese-Jewish family, the Zarcos.
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The Gospel According to Lazarus
In the New Testament, we are told that Jesus resurrected a beloved friend named Lazarus from the dead. Yet the Gospel of John – which contains this episode – does not tell us how Jesus accomplished this miracle or if he had a special purpose for saving his companion. The Gospel of John offers us only two more important details about Lazarus: that his notoriety attracted crowds to Jesus’ appearances and that he found himself menaced by Annas, a former High Priest of the Temple. The revived man’s fate clearly became tied to that of Jesus, who, because of his political and spiritual activism, had also earned the wrath of Annas and his son-in-law Caiaphas, the current High Priest. For what purpose did Jesus revive his dear friend? How will the events of Passion week affect Lazarus’ unique understanding of Jesus’ purpose, as well as test their friendship and love? In The Gospel According to Lazarus, Richard Zimler narrates this mysterious and influential story from Lazarus’ own point of view. His impeccably researched novel reveals itself in alluring layers, and his intensely moving exploration of Jesus’ final week from the point of view of his childhood friend adds a level of poignancy and desperation to the story that is certain to disturb some readers and greatly touch others.
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The Night Watchman
Eccentric Chief Inspector Henrique Monroe investigates the brutal slaying of a construction magnate in Lisbon. Is his murder related to the bribing of politicians? Memories of Henrique’s own troubled childhood in Colorado are triggered as he delves deeper into the possibility that the victim’s daughter was being sexually abused by her own father. The Night Watchman is a chilling psychological mystery that explores the ongoing effects of abuse, and a sensitive portrait of contemporary Portugal.
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The Warsaw Anagrams
The Warsaw Anagrams is a story about survival, solidarity and revenge set in Warsaw’s Jewish ghetto, magnificently written. When Erik’s nephew Adam’s lifeless body appears on the surrounding wire fence, Erik swears to avenge his murder – and brings to light the most abject perversions of the Nazi ideology. In this profoundly moving and dark novel, Erik takes the readers into Warsaw’s most forbidden territories and into the most heroic chambers of the human heart. The Warsaw Anagrams sold over 70.000 copies in the USA and the UK.
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The Seventh Gate
The Seventh Gate constitutes the fourth part of the “Sephardic Cycle”. Berlin 1932. Sophie is an intelligent fourteen-year-old coming of age. She is forced to lead a double life between her Nazi family and her Jewish friends, working against the government in a secret group called the Ring. At the same time, she fears for the safety of her younger autistic brother Hansi. When Hansi’s sterilization order comes, Sophie fights with all her ingenuity and guile to save him. In the end, however, she is forced to make a deadly betrayal. Through successive mysteries, reversals, and surprises – and across a race against time -, The Seventh Gate is at one and the same time a love story and tragedy – and a tale of ferocious heroism.
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The Search for Sana
The Search for Sana, however, is set in our present time: At a writers’ festival, Richard Zimler met the performer Sana whom he found enormously charismatic. The following evening she jumped to her death. This deeply affected him and launched him into an intense, three-year investigation of her past. He uncovered the story of a boundary-crossing friendship between two girls who grew up in Haifa in the 1950s. The Search for Sana vividly depicts the Palestinian and Israeli conflict without taking sides. Richard Zimler succeeds in integrating historical background details into the narration of an action-packed and colourful individual fate.
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Guardian of the Dawn
The third novel, Guardian of the Dawn, takes place in the early 16th century, when the Portuguese conquered the Indian province of Goa from the Sultan of Bijapur. After establishing the Inquisition, they converted tens of thousands of Hindus or immigrant Jews to Christianity. Berekiah Zarco, a Jewish manuscript illuminator, is arrested by the Portuguese Inquisition in Goa in the 16th century. Sensing he hasn’t enough strength to continue defying them while being tortured, he commits suicide. His son Tiago tries to find out who set this tragedy in motion, determined to take revenge even if it causes his own death.
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The Last Kabbalist of Lisbon
In 1989, Zimler began to publish short stories in British literary and American literary magazines. His first novel, The Last Kabbalist of Lisbon, became an immediate bestseller. It constitutes the first part of the “Sephardic Cycle”, a series of independent works exploring Jewish history through the lives of different generations and branches of a single family. The Last Kabbalist of Lisbon is a literary mystery set among secret Jews in Lisbon in 1506. Film rights have now been purchased by the head of Cinemate (“Night Train to Lisbon”). The director will be Academy-award winner Bille August.
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Hunting Midnight
In April that year, during Passover celebrations, around two thousand of Lisbon’s New Christians – Jews forcibly converted to Christianity in 1497 – were murdered in a pogrom. The story of the sequel novel Hunting Midnight is set in the early 19th century and touches on a number of issues familiar to readers of Richard Zimler, including Jewish mysticism and the forced conversion of Portuguese Jews. New, on the other hand, are the themes of African magic and slavery.
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Strawberry Fields Forever
Teresa Silva is a witty, combative, and maddeningly articulate 15-year-old who moves from the comfort of her Lisbon home to the New York suburbs. Unprepared for life in America, she finds solace in her books, her unstoppable sense of humour and her father‘s playful affection. While trying to adapt to her new school and new language, as well as a vastly different culture, she struggles to support her desperately lonely younger brother and gravely ill father and keep from becoming enraged by her neglectful mother, who prefers shopping to caring for her children. She must also try to make sense of her unrequited passion for Angel, her best friend, a Brazilian young man who is frequently bullied for being gay. When Teresa‘s father dies, her problems deepen. While she is grieving, Angel is brutally beaten by other students and drops out of school, which increases her sense of isolation and despair. She quickly falls into depression and begins to consider suicide. Teresa‘s questions about how to regain her enthusiasm and joy – and how to cope in a place where people don’t seem to understand her – reach their climax on December 8, the anniversary of John Lennon‘s death. As she and Angel set out on a pilgrimage to the Strawberry Fields Memorial in Central Park, a terrible and shocking event changes her destiny forever. Strawberry Fields Forever is an insightful and darkly funny coming-of-age novel, which, with fierce irreverence, black humour, and piercing insight, traces Teresa‘s desperate and moving journey toward herself, which in the end leads her back to life. This crossover novel goes straight to the heart of the reader.
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ERNEST: The Robot Who Painted Mischief and Laughter
In ERNEST: The Robot Who Painted Mischief and Laughter (“ERNESTO: O Robô que Pintou o Sono e a Doçura”), Ernest has gorgeous blue eyes. And with them, he can see all the colors of the rainbow and even some colors that humans can’t see. Although he has a body made of shiny metal, his velvety skin is soft to the touch. He is a handsome, intelligent and sweet-natured robot. And his outstanding memory is full of all sorts of useful information. He might even be able to live out his dream and become the first robot artist in the world! And yet, to become an excellent artist, he must be able to give form not only to what he sees in the world but also what is in his thoughts and, above all, his heart. He will have to learn to paint his feelings about himself and the world. With the help of his beloved family and his animal friends, will he be able to accomplish all that? Will he be able to cross the border that separates robots from humans and become the creative and happy little person that he so deeply wants to be?
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In the Land of Talking Animals
One afternoon, Jamie’s father takes the family’s beloved dog – Miss Marble – to the veterinarian and returns alone. His parents explain she was old and in pain and has now found the peace she deserved, but the boy is heartbroken. So to cheer him up, the family goes to the beach. One night, Jamie is having trouble sleeping and walks out to the verandah to look at the stars, which seem strangely comforting. An owl lands on the railing and begins to speak to him, which frightens the boy. The bird – Francisco – calms Jamie by explaining about the unusual kinship between the two of them and then gives him a thrilling ride on his back. After the owl departs, the boy hears a strange voice calling him from the garden below. Curious, he leans over the railing to look down and… And so begins his adventure in the land of talking animals, where squirrels, sloths, dodos and other comical and wise creatures give him replies to his questions about life and death and all that lies in between.
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If I Were a Kangaroo
Imagine being able to fly like a butterfly, jump like a kangaroo or peek through the treetops like a giraffe. We all know that children often fantasise that they can acquire the extraordinary characteristics of animals, from the smallest to the most majestic. And it’s good that they do! Because children need to “live” these transformations and have liberating adventures in order to become creative and imaginative adults, capable of realising their dreams.
If I Were a Kangaroo (“Se eu fosse…“) is a book that encourages children (and perhaps their parents too!) to overcome their limitations. This book invites children to swim like a tropical fish or sing like a blackbird – or even ward off bathers on the beach with the “smile” of a shark!
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The Dog Who Ate Raindrops
David is eleven years old and lives in London with his parents, his border collie Adam and his mischievous but lazy cat, Violet, who is the narrator of The Dog Who Ate Raindrops. Peter wants to be a professional goalkeeper and world-famous flautist, but after he returns from school with bruises on his arms and face, his family discovers that he has lost all interest in music, sports and most everything else. He also refuses to take Adam and Violet for their usual walk around their neighborhood. What could be wrong with him? When the cat and dog finally learn what’s been bothering Peter, they decide to take matters into their own hands. But will they find the courage to defend their human brother against all that threatens him?
The Dog Who Ate Raindrops is a moving, amusing and thrilling story from renowned novelist Richard Zimler. It won Portugal’s most important prize for children’s literature, the Bissaya-Barreto Prize, and has been singled out for its frank exploration of bullying. The unusual and tender illustrations for the Portuguese edition were done by the country’s most famous painter, Júlio Pomar.
RIGHTS
NOVELS
The Village of Vanished Souls II (“A Aldeia das Almas Desaparecidas II”)
Lisbon: Porto Editora 2023, 568 p.
The Village of Vanished Souls I (“A Aldeia das Almas Desaparecidas I”)
Lisbon: Porto Editora 2022, 656 p.
Voted Best Book of the Year 2022 (Livraria Bertrand)
The Incandescent Threads
Cardigan, UK: Parthian Books 2022, 500 p., paperback 2023
Finalist of the 72nd National Jewish Book Award 2022
Nominated for the Sunday Times’ Best Historical Fiction Book Award 2022
Jewish Chronicle (UK), one of the Best Books of 2022
Finalist Bertrand Book of the Year (Portugal) 2018
Number 1 Bestseller in Portugal 2018
Portugal: Porto Editora 2018, 437 p.
The Gospel According to Lazarus
London: Peter Owen 2019, 411 p., English world rights; Barbican Press pb 2022, 496 p., under the title The Lost Gospel of Lazarus
Portugal: Porto Editora 2016, 456 p.
Best Novel of 2016 – FNAC Bookstores (22 shops in Portugal)
Best Book of 2016 – Jornal de Notícias
Brazil: Globo 2018 · France: Cherche Midi 2021 · Sweden: Lusima Böcker 2023
The Night Watchman
London: Constable & Robinson 2014, 422 p.
France: Rouerge Noir (Actes Sud) 2016 · Portugal: Editora Porto 2013
Strawberry Fields Forever
London: Arcadia 2012, 220 p.
Audio visual rights under option
Brazil: Record 2013 · Portugal: Dom Quixote 2011
The Warsaw Anagrams
London: Constable & Robinson 2011, 323 p.
Over 70.000 copies sold in the USA and the UK
Film rights under option
Brazil: Record 2010 · France: Buchet-Chastel 2013 · Italy: Piemme 2012 · The Netherlands: Karakter 2012 · Poland: Zysk I S-ka 2011 · Portugal: Oceanos 2009 · Serbia: IPS Media 2010 · Spain: Urano 2012 · Turkey: Inkilap 2011 · USA: Overlook Press 2011
The Seventh Gate
London: Constable & Robinson 2007; Cardigan, UK: Parthian Books 2023, 592 p. (English rights remain available)
Brazil: Record 2014 · The Netherlands: Karakter · Portugal: ASA 2007 · Sweden: Lusima Böcker 2008 · USA: Overlook Press
The Search for Sana
London: Constable & Robinson 2005; Cardigan, UK: Parthian Books 2023, 245 p. (English rights remain available)
Brazil: Relume Dumará 2007 · France: Cherche Midi 2009 · Portugal: Gótica 2006 · Sweden: Lusima Böcker 2008
Guardian of the Dawn
New York: Bantam/Delacorte Press 2005; Cardigan, UK: Parthian Books 2023, 386p. (English rights remain available)
France: Cherche Midi 2008 · Poland: Zysk I S-ka 2006 · Portugal: Gótica 2005 · UK: Constable & Robinson 2005
Hunting Midnight
New York: Bantam/Delacorte Press 2003; Cardigan, UK: Parthian Books 2023, 544 p. (English rights remain available)
Selected among 10 of the best books set in Portugal by The Guardian, 2020
Czech Republic: Argo 2007 · Denmark: Forlaget Ørby · France: Cherche Midi 2006 · Italy: Cavallo di Ferro 2006 · Poland: Zysk I S-ka 2005 · Portugal: Gótica 2003 · Russia: AST 2006 · Serbia: Laguna 2007 · Spain: Edhasa 2007 · Turkey: Inkilap 2004 · UK: Constable & Robinson 2004
The Angelic Darkness
Lisbon: Quetzal 1998, 195 p.
UK: Arcadia 2000 · USA: Norton 1999
Unholy Ghosts
Norfolk: GMP Publications 1996, 255 p.
Italy: Playground 2007 · Portugal: Porto Editora 2020
The Last Kabbalist of Lisbon
Lisbon: Quetzal 1996, 313 p. Porto: Porto Editora pb 2013
Film rights sold to Cinemate, directed by: Bille August
Book rights sold into 23 countries
Brazil: Companhia das Letras 1998, Relume Dumará 2007, Record/BestBolso 2010 · Bulgaria: Pamet · Croatia: Miob · Czech Rep.: Argo 2005 · France: Flammarion 1997 · Germany: Rowohlt 1997; pb 1999 · Greece: Livani 2001 · Hungary: Sweetwater 2002 · Israel: Penn 2002 · Italy: Mondadori 1998 · Japan: Jiritsu Shobo 2009 · Lithuania: Pasvires Pasualis 2004 · The Netherlands: Bzztôh 1999, Sirene pb 2000, Karakter · Norway: Kagge 2006, pb 2007 · Poland: Zysk I S-ka 2003 · Romania: Humanitas 2007 · Russia: AST 2005 · Serbia & Montenegro: Laguna 2004 · Spain: Edhasa 1999 · Turkey: Iletisim 2002 · UK: Arcadia 1998, pb 2000; Corsair (Little Brown) pb 2014 · USA: Overlook Press 1998
STORIES
Confundir a Cidade com o Mar
Lisbon: Ozenaos 2008, 212 p.
FOR CHILDREN
ERNEST: The Robot Who Painted Mischief and Laughter (“ERNESTO: O Robô que Pintou o Sono e a Doçura”)
Ill. by Natalina Cóias
Lisbon: Porto Editora 2024, 64 p.
The Shameless Stork and Other Poems (“A Cegonha sem Vergonha“)
Ill. by Patrícia Figueiredo
Lisbon: Porto Editora 2022, 40 p.
In the Land of Talking Animals (“Na Terra dos Animais falantes”)
Ill. by Patrícia Figueiredo
Lisbon: Porto Editora 2019, 64 p.
Tim and Lynn and the Lost Magician (“Maria e Danilo e o mágico perdido”)
Lisbon: Porto Editora 2018, 45 p.
If I Were a Kangaroo (“Se Eu Fosse…“)
Ill. by Aurélie de Sousa
Lisbon: Porto Editora 2016, 48 p.
Italy: Editorial Picarona 2019
Spain: Editorial Picarona 2019
The Dog Who Ate Raindrops (“O Cão que Comia a Chuva“)
Ill. by Julio Pómar
Lisbon: Porto Editora 2016, 48 p.
Bissaya-Barreto Prize 2018
English translation available
Hugo and Me and the Mangoes from Mars (“Hugo e Eu e as Mangas de Marte“)
Ill. by Bernardo Carvalho
Lisbon: Caminho 2011, 42 p.
Do A Little Dance When You Reach the End (“Dança Quando Chegares ao Fim”)
Ill. by Bernardo Carvalho
Lisbon: Caminho 2009, 36 p.; Planeta Tangerina: 2021, 2023
Brazil: Record 2013
Rights outside Portugal and Brazil handled by Planeta Tangerina
PARTICIPATION IN ANTHOLOGIES
Der Kinder Kalender 2024
Germany: Moritz 2023
(Excerpt of Do A Little Dance When You Reach the End)