Ethel Portnoy

Ethel Portnoy

Ethel Portnoy in 1979
Born Ethel Portnoy
(1927-03-08)8 March 1927
Philadelphia, United States
Died 25 May 2004(2004-05-25) (aged 77)
The Hague, Netherlands
Occupation Author
Nationality Dutch Jewish
Genre Essay, Short Story, Novel
For other people with the name Portnoy, see Portnoy.

Ethel Portnoy (March 8, 1927 – May 25, 2004) was a Dutch Jewish writer. She wrote mainly essays, columns, short stories, travel stories and several novels.

Biography

Ethel Portnoy was born in Philadelphia but grew up in the Bronx in New York as the daughter of Russian-Jewish immigrants. She took classes in English literature in New York and learned French in the United States, then departed to Europe in 1950 with a Fulbright for the University of Lyon. She also studied cultural anthropology and archeology in Paris, with Claude Lévi-Strauss amongst others. She married Dutch author Rudy Kousbroek (1929–2010) in 1951. She raised two children and until 1962 she worked at the UNESCO. She worked for Dutch papers and was published in Randstad, in the weeklies Haagse Post and Vrij Nederland and also in the NRC/Handelsblad. The family moved to The Hague in 1970. In the late 1970s Portnoy was one of the editors of the feminist literary journal Chrysallis. Since 1979, she worked at the journal Maatstaf.

Portnoy debuted as a novelist in 1971 at the age of 44 with the book Steen en Been. She wrote in English, but considered herself a Dutch writer. Her books were translated by her (ex-)husband (they were divorded in the 1980s), their daughter Hepzibah Kousbroek (1954–2009) and by Tinke Davids.

Works

Most of her books were published by Amsterdam publisher Meulenhoff.

Literature

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, May 06, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.