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How a best-selling children's author beat Long Covid to write a book about Jewish heroines

Liz Kessler's new book is about two brave Jewish sisters who join the resistance in wartime Amsterdam

September 15, 2023 16:33
Liz Kessler © Jillian Edelstein
3 min read

According to children’s writer Liz Kessler’s agent, whatever she’s writing about, the themes are the same. “It doesn’t matter if it’s mermaids or lesbians or the Holocaust or teenage girls in the resistance, but it’s always basically about our responsibility to other people, about social justice, about standing up for what you believe in and having a conscience."

The mermaids feature in Kessler’s phenomenally successful Emily Windsnap series which have been best sellers for 20 years, selling millions here and in the US. The lesbians refer to her YA debut  Read Me Like a Book, a coming of age, coming out love story that took 15  years to be published.

But it was her Holocaust book  When the World was Ours, published in 2021, that has brought her the most critical acclaim and loads of awards — 11 so far, mostly voted for by young readers. It’s currently up for the most prestigious children’s book prize in Germany too. “In 20 years of writing, I haven’t had anything close to the response to that book,” says Kessler. 

Writers often ask themselves if they’d prefer acclaim and awards but no money, or sales without literary recognition: “I always chose the sales,” says Kessler.  “And that’s what I got with Emily Windsnap. This is the first time I’ve had the other.” She thinks it is partly because of the subject matter, which tackled the subject unflinchingly, through the eyes of three friends, two of them Jewish, and goes where many children’s books fear to tread, right into the camps. “An exceptional read,” said the Times.