Become a Member
Life

‘My fiction shows the truth of what’s going on in northern Israel’

Sarah Sultoon on how her experience reporting on Hezbollah and Lebanon steered her approach to writing her novel Dirt

October 16, 2024 09:26
00
In the field: Sarah Sultoon on a journalistic assignment in Sudan Photo: courtesy of Natalie Goldwater
3 min read

Too often the representation of journalism is not authentic in fiction,” says Sarah Sultoon. “It has to feel real otherwise it doesn’t feel right.” That is what inspired her to swap a 15-year career as an award-winning news journalist to writing political thrillers. “Journalism taught me a lot when it comes to fiction. Journalists know what makes a compelling story and how best to communicate it.”

Sultoon’s career as a journalist began at CNN in 2002 after she graduated from the University of Birmingham. She has covered some of the biggest world news events, including the London terror attacks in July 2005 as well as working as a field producer in war zones including Afghanistan, Iraq, Sudan and Israel/Lebanon during the 2006 conflict. This gave her unique access and insight to events as they were unfolding on the ground. Her work on the war in Syria won her three Peabody Awards, which honours excellence in storytelling. “When the facts are under attack, the medium of fiction is a powerful tool,” she says. “I started writing my novels partly as a response to the term ‘fake news’ used by President Trump in 2016 to attack journalists or media he didn’t like. I got sick of the truth being devalued, of journalists being cast as enemies of the people.”

Sarah SultoonSarah Sultoon[Missing Credit]

She adds: “It is increasingly difficult to navigate the news and current affairs online. We now live in an age where journalists are targets simply for doing their jobs. But fiction can still reach people and make them question what happens in real life.”

Dirt, published by Orenda Books nine months prior to the October 7 attacks, is set on a fictional kibbutz in northern Israel on the border with Lebanon in 1996. The story focuses on a young reporter, Jonny, who investigates the suspicious murder of an Israeli-Arab and soon uncovers an infiltration of tunnels and caves underneath the kibbutz. The historical context in the book reflects true events, with a backdrop of political unrest between Israel and Lebanon, and Hezbollah rocket attacks. Sultoon says she chose this period of history because it made an impression on her in her formative years as a teenager.