Yael van der Wouden (born 1987) is a Dutch writer. Her first novel, The Safekeep , was shortlisted for the 2024 Booker Prize.
Yael Van der Wouden was born in 1987 [1] Tel Aviv, Israel, to an Israeli mother and a Dutch father, and grew up in the Netherlands. [2] She started ballet classes at the age of three, and competed in her school's talent show aged ten, with a dance interpreting a flame. [3]
She studied comparative literature at Utrecht University and SUNY Binghamton. [4] She has described herself as a "Dutch-Israeli mixed-bag-diaspora child". [1]
Van der Wouden's essay "On (Not) Reading Anne Frank" was published in The Best American Essays in 2018, and received a "notable mention". [5] [6] It "explored the ways in which that totemic, sentimentalised figure threatened to leave little space for [Van der Wouden's] own explorations of her Dutch-Jewish identity". [7]
Her first novel, The Safekeep (2024) was the subject of bidding wars between nine publishers for the United Kingdom edition and ten for the United States. [8] It is the story of Isabel, who lives in her late parents' house 15 years after the end of World War II, and her brother's partner Eva who comes to stay for the summer: "What happens between the two women leads to a revelation which threatens to unravel all she has ever known." [9] The Observer 's reviewer says that the author "weaves this story of historical reckoning (or its avoidance) with an account of Isabel's individual and sexual awakening," [7] The Guardian 's reviewer called it "An impressive debut" and said "The book's powerful final act provides an already weighty emotional situation with an extra layer of historical heft", [10] and The New York Times 's reviewer described it as "An Erotic Story of Love and Obsession in 1960s Amsterdam". [11]
Van der Wouden has taught creative writing, storytelling, and literature. [4]
The Safekeep was shortlisted for the 2024 Booker Prize. [12] It was the first shortlisted title by a Dutch author and the only debut novel on the 2024 shortlist. [13] [13]