Current:Home > FinanceLore Segal, esteemed Austrian American writer who fled the Nazis as a child, dies at 96 -NextFrontier Finance
Lore Segal, esteemed Austrian American writer who fled the Nazis as a child, dies at 96
View
Date:2025-04-16 13:11:43
NEW YORK (AP) — Lore Segal, an esteemed Viennese American author and translator whose gift for words helped her family escape from the Nazis and who later drew upon her experiences as a Jewish refugee and immigrant for such fiction as “Other People’s Houses” and “Her First American,” died Monday at 96.
Segal, a longtime resident of Manhattan’s Upper West Side, died in her apartment after a brief illness, her publisher Melville House said in a statement.
After settling in the U.S. in 1951, Segal wrote novels, short stories, essays and children’s books and translated the Bible and Grimms’ fairy tales, which featured illustrations by her friend Maurice Sendak. Her life — filtered through memory and imagination — was her greatest muse. “Other People’s Houses,” released in 1964 and originally serialized in the New Yorker, closely followed her childhood in Austria, her years in foster care in London during World War II and her arrival in New York, where the growing familiarity with the city’s sights and sounds — “charged thus upon the air” — makes the “alien into a citizen.”
“Her First American” continued her early experiences in the U.S., while “Lucinella” was a comic novella inspired by her time in the 1970s at the Yaddo artist retreat in upstate New York. Segal, who taught at Columbia University, Princeton University and several other schools, satirized academic life in “Shakespeare’s Kitchen.”
In 2019, she compiled her fiction and nonfiction in the anthology “The Journal I Did Not Keep,” in which she summarized the importance and imperfection of recapturing the past.
“I believe that the act of remembering and telling the story of what he remember will always be to some extent fatal to the thing remembered,” she wrote. “So what really happened?”
Her many admirers included such author-critics as Cynthia Ozick, Vivian Gornick and Alfred Kazin. In 2008, she was a Pulitzer Prize finalist for her novel “Shakespeare’s Kitchen.” The American Academy of Arts and Letters inducted her in 2023.
Gornick would cite her “ironic intelligence” and “gift for detachment.” In her fiction, Segal set a tone that was even, objective and occasionally cutting, like her description of an artist in “Lucinella” who “tends to mumble her words inside her mouth, so as to keep the option of eating them.” She could also be intimate and familiar, with such recurring characters as her alter ego Ilka, a Viennese refugee; and Carter Bayoux, a Black intellectual with whom Ilka has an affair in “Her First American.”
Her narratives were often sustained through passages of overheard conversation, whether at a literary cocktail party in Harlem or a gathering of faculty members in Connecticut. Several stories in her 2023 collection “Ladies’ Lunch” were structured around the midday meals of friends in advanced old age who share memories, regrets, fears and everyday concerns.
“I like writing dialogue,” she told the online publication The Millions in 2019. “I like it better than explaining. I’d rather have a character develop and express him or herself through dialogue than explaining what they’re thinking. It’s a preference. I like how we discover and uncover ourselves through dialogue. I tell my students, you see any two people together, walk behind them, listen, get the tone of their voice.”
Besides her books, Segal wrote for The New York Times, The New Republic, the Forward and other publications. The children’s story “When Mole Lost His Glasses,” with drawings by Sergio Ruzzier, was adapted into an educational video featuring Spike Lee and then-New York Knick Stephon Marbury.
Segal married the literary editor David Segal in 1961 and had two children. Her husband died of a heart attack in 1970.
She was born Lore Groszmann in Vienna in 1928, and grew up in a prosperous neighborhood until the Nazis annexed the country a decade later and antisemitism drove her family to ship her off on the Kindertransport to London, a time Segal and her mother would discuss in Mark Jonathan Harris’ Academy Award-winning documentary “Into the Arms of Strangers.”
Separation somehow empowered her. Inquisitive and often impulsive, she wrote so many letters to British authorities that they granted her parents the rare privilege of letting them join her in London, where they worked as domestic servants. Lore stayed with a series of families, including one whose incomprehension of her past inspired her first real storytelling.
“It seemed to me they had no idea of what it was like to live in Vienna under Hitler,” Segal told The Associated Press in 2011. “They were asking me questions that didn’t seem to be relevant. They had some profound lack of information. So I got hold of one of those little exercise books, homework books. I filled the 36 pages in German with the story, which is essentially the story of ‘Other People’s Houses.’”
After the war, Segal graduated from the University of London’s Bedford College and lived briefly in the Dominican Republic — where other family members had settled — until allowed in the United States. Before becoming a writer, she discovered the various careers she was not meant for: She was a “bad file clerk,” a “bad secretary” and “pretty bad textile designer.”
Writing, at first, also didn’t seem to work because she believed she had nothing to say. She had never been in love and thought “no big things” had happened to her, not even during the war. Her breakthrough came in a class at the New School for Social Research in New York.
“After the class we all kept meeting and doing our own creative writing class,” Segal told the AP. “And somebody said to me, ‘How did you get to America?’ And I began to tell the stories. And there was that experience, of people listening. It was lovely. Nobody had ever done that. Most people don’t have that experience, their story being valued.”
veryGood! (921)
Related
- Boy who wandered away from his 5th birthday party found dead in canal, police say
- Is New York City sinking? NASA finds metropolitan area slowly submerging
- Las Vegas Raiders' Chandler Jones arrested for violating restraining order
- Is New York City sinking? NASA finds metropolitan area slowly submerging
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Hi Hi!
- Colorado laws that add 3-day wait period to buy guns and open paths to sue gun industry take effect
- Burglar recalls Bling Ring's first hit at Paris Hilton's home in exclusive 'Ringleader' clip
- Transgender minors in Nebraska, their families and doctors brace for a new law limiting treatment
- John Galliano out at Maison Margiela, capping year of fashion designer musical chairs
- NYC floods: Photos show torrential rain wreaking havoc on New York City, North Jersey
Ranking
- Macy's says employee who allegedly hid $150 million in expenses had no major 'impact'
- Hurry, Save Up to 90% at Kate Spade Surprise Before These Deals Sell Out!
- Rocker bassinets potentially deadly for babies, safety regulator warns
- Michael Oher's Conservatorship With Tuohy Family Officially Terminated
- JoJo Siwa reflects on Candace Cameron Bure feud: 'If I saw her, I would not say hi'
- Almost all of Nagorno-Karabakh’s people have left, Armenia’s government says
- Get Gorgeous, Give Gorgeous Holiday Sale: Peter Thomas Roth, Tarte & More Under $100 Deals
- French police are being accused of systemic discrimination in landmark legal case
Recommendation
Illinois Gov. Pritzker calls for sheriff to resign after Sonya Massey shooting
Jessica Campbell, Kori Cheverie breaking barriers for female coaches in NHL
Michael Oher's Conservatorship With Tuohy Family Officially Terminated
Backers of North Dakota congressional age limits sue over out-of-state petitioner ban
'Survivor' 47 finale, part one recap: 2 players were sent home. Who's left in the game?
Actor Michael Gambon, who played Harry Potter's Dumbledore, dies at 82
'Sparks' author Ian Johnson on Chinese 'challenging the party's monopoly on history'
Emerging election issues in New Jersey include lawsuits over outing trans students, offshore wind