The Fig Tree is a tender book of true stories about family, about journeys, about home. Arnold Zable, bestselling author of Cafe Scheherazade , describes remarkable people struggling through tragic times and rejoicing in the unexpectedness of life itself. Zable writes with wonderful feeling about the Greek villagers who made the long journey to and from Australia, about those lost in the Holocaust and postwar diaspora, about Jewish actors and writers who found new audiences in their adoptive country.
At the heart of this book is Zable's understanding of our obligations to the wanderers among us, to the dispossessed and the stateless. He makes a gift of their stories in The Fig Tree , celebrating the common threads of humanity that bind us all.
'The master storyteller has done it again. ' Australian Book Review
Zable was born on 10 January 1947 in Wellington, New Zealand to Polish-Jewish refugee parents. They moved early in his life to Australia and he grew up in Carlton, Victoria.
Zable is known as a storyteller - through his memoirs, short stories and novels. Australian critic Susan Varga says that Zable's award-winning memoir, Jewels and Ashes, "was a ground-breaking book in Australia, one of the first of what has since become a distinct auto/biographical genre: a second-generation writer returns to the scene of unspeakable crimes to try to understand a fraught and complex legacy, and, in so doing, embarks on a journey into the self.
In an interview Zable explained that the rights and experiences of refugees and asylum seekers underpins his work:
"The current generation of refugees are experiencing the intense challenges faced by previous generations. We tend to forget, or fail to imagine, how difficult it is to start life anew far from the homeland. We forget also that nostalgia, the longing for the return to homeland, is a deep and enduring aspect of the refugee experience."
In the same interview he said about his language that "I am drawn to the quirky sayings and observations that define a person or a culture".
Zable poetically recalls memories from childhood and takes the reader on a journey through the unsettled and, at times, tragic past of his and his wife's family. The story travels from suburban Melbourne (Australia) to Europe. The nostalgia and yearning for another place and time is palpable. He describes the migrant experience in a poetic and relatable way. Zable has a great empathy and shares it with the reader in the hopes of showing us we are all the same. Humans share emotions, yearning, love and the wish to live a peaceful, meaningful life. I really loved reading this book and recommend it to anyone who loves memoir.
The Fig Tree spins the unsung stories of Jewish people. The stories may initially centre in 1930's -1950's Carlton, Melbourne, the author's home base now, but they fan out to connections with Poland, Greece, Russia, Thessaloniki and Austria. There's a mother's story, a father's, a poet's story and the story of lovers - to name a few. Each one symbolises a picture of yearning, a limbo, a feeling that home is a question still waiting for an answer. Maintaining some semblance of allegiance to old values and adapting to new ones becomes a tension, a struggle and a hope to reach some kind of balance. Zable offers perspectives from a range of age groups. Each one has its own unique narrative, strength and view of life. The result is an intriguing insight into the life of wanderers, shunted out of their own worlds, by such as the Holocaust, and seeking a sense of place and value.
As I am a keen genealogist, I thought I would really enjoy this book. But I didn't. It is descriptively written, but really quite boring. The stories of the family ties weren't deep enough for me.