Jewish Book Festival

Jewish Book Festival A niche literary festival showcasing Jewish writers and/or subjects from Canada and around the world

A niche literary festival showcasing Jewish writers and/or subject matter from Canada and around the world.

How incredibly cool is it when the amazing John Irving mentions you casually to the The New York Times"... as in "instea...
02/20/2026

How incredibly cool is it when the amazing John Irving mentions you casually to the The New York Times"... as in "instead of going to the Olympics to watch his grandkids compete....."

Now 83, the great American author still rises to write every day. He is not retired because he cannot retire. “If you’re a writer,” he says, “what excuse do you have to stop?” Irving’s 16th novel, “Queen Esther,” published last year.
Even at this stage, Irving’s public profile very much remains his identity. He can’t attend the Olympics because traveling to the Italian Alps and asthma complications aren’t a great mix. So instead he’ll be in Vancouver, sitting on stage at the Jewish Book Festival as a featured speaker."

Great article in the Vancouver Sun about our wonderful Opening Night guest John Irving!Author John Irving on faith, iden...
02/19/2026

Great article in the Vancouver Sun about our wonderful Opening Night guest John Irving!

Author John Irving on faith, identity and opening Vancouver's Jewish Book Festival
The Cider House Rules author brings his latest novel, Queen Esther, to the Vancouver Jewish Book Festival

When John Irving comes to Vancouver this month to open the Jewish Book Festival, he’ll do so as a Canadian citizen, a longtime resident, and — as he notes with some bemusement — a non-Jewish writer launching a festival devoted to Jewish literature.

Best known for sprawling, big-hearted novels such as The World According to Garp, A Prayer for Owen Meany and The Cider House Rules, Irving is now on his 16th novel, Queen Esther. We talked to the 83-year-old novelist about family ties, the lifelong friendships forged through sport, and the path that led him to Queen Esther, a novel shaped early on by questions of Jewish identity, antisemitism and Zionism.
Q: You’re opening the Jewish Book Festival in Vancouver. Have you been part of it before?
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A: I’ve certainly not been to the Jewish Book Festival, and I’m very honoured that, as someone who isn’t Jewish, I’m the opening act. I’m thrilled.

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Q: Anything complicating the visit?
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A: I have two grandchildren on the U.S. Ski Team, and my two days in Vancouver are the days they’ll be in the halfpipe in Livigno. If people see my assistant and me checking our phones trying to find the CBC Gem stream, that’s why. The timing could have been better.

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Q: You live part-time in Canada and are now a citizen. How do you think about family in the U.S., especially now?
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A: Two of my three children live in the U.S., as do my four grandchildren, and all my brothers and sisters. Even though I’ve lived in Canada for years and been a full-time resident since 2014, I have more close friends in the U.S. That’s about when you make your most intimate friendships — when you’re younger, on teams. The closeness you have with teammates, I’ve not found an equivalent of among my fellow writers.
Q: Did the character Esther come before the novel’s engagement with Jewish identity and antisemitism?
A: Yes. All of my novels pre-exist as works in progress for more years than it takes me to write them. I’m an ending-driven writer. I always know more about where and when my novels end than where they begin.
Q: What was predetermined with Queen Esther?
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A: I knew from the beginning that this was a pro-Jewish, pro-Israel novel, just as I knew The Cider House Rules was an abortion-rights novel. My job was to create a timeline for an empathetic Zionist and make it understandable that if you were Esther, you would likely feel the same way.

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Q: You knew her life in detail before you began?
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A: I knew who she was, where she was born — Vienna, 1905 — and that by the time she was four, antisemitism would already have shaped her life. I knew she would be orphaned and that she would have a fierce determination to make up the Jewish life taken from her.

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Q: The orphanage feels familiar.
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A: Because I’d written The Cider House Rules, I knew an orphanage and someone who would make every effort to find out where she came from. I also knew I was creating the most unadoptable orphan Dr. Larch (a major character in The Cider House Rules) might ever have seen. That part fell into my hands. It was a gift.
Q: Why did the novel come together more quickly than others?
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A: For the first time, I knew almost as much about the beginning as the ending. Normally the beginning is where I’m most at loose ends. This time, it was working for me at both ends.

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Q: Why choose a non-Jewish point-of-view character?
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A: As someone who isn’t Jewish, it was important for me to be in that point of view, which I know very well. I relied on strong Jewish friendships I’ve had and where they came from. That made it not only an easier but a much quicker novel for me.

We're so proud of our featured author  Ishi Ron for winning the National Jewish Book Award in the Book Club and Hebrew F...
02/18/2026

We're so proud of our featured author Ishi Ron for winning the National Jewish Book Award in the Book Club and Hebrew Fiction in Translation categories!

Jewish Book Council is thrilled to share the winners for the 75th National Jewish Book Awards. These exceptional stories and storytellers join a long tradition of literary excellence, as the National Jewish Book Awards is the longest-running Jewish literary awards. Their work illuminates Jewish life, history, and culture in a powerful way. See the full list of winners here. https://bit.ly/3MwN1as

And join us on March 25th in NYC for the 75th National Jewish Book Awards celebration! Tickets can be purchased here. https://bit.ly/40gkXLz

Great article about Dina Goldstein's art in the The Georgia Straight! Posting it in full so that you can actually read i...
02/11/2026

Great article about Dina Goldstein's art in the The Georgia Straight! Posting it in full so that you can actually read it..... Come hear DIna tomorrow, Feb 12, 7:00pm at the Jewish Community Centre of Greater Vancouver!

Dina Goldstein's new book ### celebrates the power of film, rewards of travel, and beauty of humanity

One of the weird realities of the 21st century is that being brilliant in a hyper-creative field like photography is often no longer good enough if you hope to make a living. Dina Goldstein saw that sea change coming early.

As noted in her new book ###, the Vancouver-based photographer became obsessed with taking pictures at the end of her teens. It’s a career she didn’t predict for herself growing up.

“I was a theatre kid,” she notes in an extended interview with the Straight, in advance of an appearance at the Jewish Book Festival. “So acting—that’s what I thought I was going to do. I was actually in the first episode of 21 Jump Street—the pilot episode. I was a very highly paid background performer with one line. I can’t even remember what that line was, but in the scene we were all sitting around a drama class at Eric Hamber where it was filmed. That was my high school.”
Interrupting plans to follow series star Johnny Depp onto bigger and better things was a life-changing trip to the Sinai Desert. Goldstein touched down overseas with a point-and-shoot borrowed from her aunt. She came home in love with the idea of documenting experiences on film. Eventually, that turned into a freelance photography career which paid well and kept her busy. Until it didn’t. One day, Goldstein had top-tier newspapers and magazine publications across the country running her work. And then came a seismic shift that changed everything.

“I was making a good living,” Goldstein reminisces. “And then what happened was the digital revolution. Basically, the jobs that were offered at birth were suddenly depleted. It was obviously because everyone had their digital cameras, and so photography became easier for people—they didn’t have to know their technical stuff, and so there were suddenly a lot more shooters out there available. And art directors started shooting their own pictures. I started recognizing at this point that the value of photography was flailing.”

So she reinvented herself. But, in doing so, Goldstein always remembered what got her to where she is today.

“I call it the Holy Trinity, she says. “I’ve got the portraiture, the street photography, and the tableau.”

And that’s kind of where ### starts: as a tribute to a creative world she came from and still inhabits today.
“I just like to grab my camera, go out in the world, or go out into my neighbourhood—East Vancouver—and document,” Goldstein shares. “There’s so much out there. It keeps me fresh, and it keeps me in touch with what’s going on.”
THE IDEA FOR ### came to Goldstein during the pandemic. Like many of us, she found herself with time on her hands. She also found herself thinking about the thousands and thousands of pictures she’d shot over the years, many of which were sitting in storage in her studio, forgotten even by her.

One of the great things about photographs is the way they serve as reference points for one’s own past. Looking through film negatives and old prints, Goldstein was at first reminded of her own childhood memories, where she’d hit a bookstore on Granville Street and be fascinated by a book series, titled Photo Annual, which collected photos from past eras.

“These are books that I still have at my studio—annuals from the ’30s and ’40s,” she says. “That’s what I kind of based my book on. They published the books every year, and it was just a black cover with the date on it, and that was it. Then, inside, were all the yummies.”

Striking Goldstein about those photos is the power of images that are shot on film—a medium she still loves best.

“Film has character,” she says succinctly. “It can say, ‘Hi—I’m very bright and colourful and contrasty.' Or ‘I’m very subtle, and so are my colours.’ Each film has a character. With digital, you are putting the character in.”

Her love of shooting on film comes honestly.
After coming out of Langara College—where she designed her own curriculum in arts and photography—Goldstein got her start in community newspapers in 1993 as a staffer at Vancouver’s Jewish Western Bulletin. In just a decade she became a go-to freelancer for some of the city’s most respected publications, shooting covers and feature stories for Vancouver Magazine, BCBusiness, Vancouver Sun, and, yes, The Georgia Straight. There were also paid gigs for media outlets across North America—a week after 9/11 she was sent to New York to document first responders.

“The internet was fairly new back then, and I put it up on a magazine called jpeg.com,” Goldstein shares. “It was for my own community because it was a community site—kind of like, ‘Love what you’re doing!’ When I loaded Fallen Princesses, suddenly two days later the whole thing went viral, and I had every newspaper in the world calling me to publish the pictures. That success allowed me to move onto another project. It was like, ‘Okay—this is working’, so I continued on. And now I’m eight projects in.”

That includes her most recent series, the just-released MISTRESSPIECES, in which Goldstein uses famous historical women to draw attention to the pressing issues of the 21st century. The woman in Johannes Vermeer’s Girl With a Pearl Earring is seen standing on a beach littered with plastic waste. Looking computer-generated, and standing amidst a sea of phone screens, Marilyn Monroe is used as a springboard for examining AI. Such pieces are, quite intentionally, not included in ###. After all, the goal in the book is in many ways to showcase where Goldstein came from, not where she’s positioned herself today.
For the past decade, her work has been shown in galleries around the world, purchased by collectors, and analyzed by academics. God-given talent is, of course, at the core of an ascension that now has her mentioned with Lotusland giants like Fred Herzog, Jeff Wall, and Stan Douglas. Many shooters tend to focus their energies on one area—portraiture, fashion, food, street, or concert photography. The danger of that was driven home in the middle of the 2000s when work started to dry up as budgets shrunk at media outlets, particularly ones hanging on to print.

Goldstein has always believed that one has to be able to pivot and adapt if they want to remain part of the conversation. So even though her energies have shifted over the past few decades, ### serves as a tribute to what first made her fall in love with photography. That includes interacting with everyday people in their own milieus, whether it’s Lynchian-looking regulars at the Hastings Racecourse, everyday Americans at a roadside diner in California, or a slum-dwelling family in Mumbai.

“The camera gives you strength and courage,” she offers. “So I just go up to people, because I love how extraordinary and diverse people are.”
GOLDSTEIN CHEEKILY NOTES that she’s well aware what the title ### will bring to mind.

“I even wrote in the book, ‘This is not a dirty book,’” Goldstein says with a big laugh. “That’s just my sense of humour. ### stands for three decades—the ’90s, the 2000s, and the 2010s. That’s the way that I split up the archives and kept the photos together in groups.”

Travelling remains a lifelong passion; her path to photography can be directly traced to that early exploration of the Sinai Desert with her aunt’s point-and-shoot, and the thrill of getting the film developed. So it’s not surprising that ### works as a celebration of the joy of discovering new places, customs, and cultures, some familiar and kitsch-cool (Times Square during the peep-show years, fantastically tacky Vegas), some thrillingly exotic (Man with Donkey is shot in the shadow of the pyramids in Giza, Egypt; Marina Scene transports us to the docks of Istanbul; Woman in Window captures the quieter side of Venice, Italy.) Her favourite photo in the book is Barbershop Circumcision, which is shot in Jerusalem and, if you look closely, captures a scene where haircuts are only one of the services offered.

Consider the collection—which includes essays written by both Goldstein and her peers—a document of a life lived fascinatingly, the photos showcasing an endless curiosity about the planet we live on.
What also bleeds through her ### shots is a genuine love of her fellow human beings. For historians, there are shots of the famous (Bill Clinton, Douglas Coupland, Nardwuar the Human Serviette), and shots of a Vancouver that no longer exists (a couple stands looking into a long-shuttered Downtown Eastside pawn shop in B.C. Collateral.)

Arguably the most captivating photos are ones of everyday people. To spend a minute with them is to wonder what their stories might be: the Abbotsford blueberry pickers of Group of Workers in Field, the trophy-clutching Cloverdale Rodeo tyke in Little Cowboy, and a Dominican Republic s*x worker holding a picture of Jesus for Pr******te.
The message behind ### then is maybe this: there’s a beautiful world out there, so don’t be afraid to explore it, celebrating both the commonalities and the differences you might have with your fellow human beings. In doing so, you might learn something.

“I hope people are entertained by the photos, and that they discover things that they didn’t know about that brings a smile to their face,” she says. “I hope that it brings that kind of happy, analogue feeling we miss so much, and are so desperate for and don’t get with digital. It’s something tangible.”

And maybe, ### might also serve as a roadmap for anyone who needs a reminder to always remain curious about whatever their passions are.

“I can do anything,” she says proudly. “Put a camera in front of me, and I can do it. You have to be that person here in Vancouver. You can’t be like they were in New York—‘Oh, I specialize in this, or I specialiize in that.’ And those that did never grew.”

And if you find yourself inspired by ### to pick up a camera and start documenting the world around you—maybe even using film—then the book has done its job. Let Dina Goldstein be your guiding unicorn.

Dina Goldstein gives a free JCC Jewish Book Festival talk titled Photography: Witness in Our Community, on Thursday (February 12) at the Jewish Community Centre of Greater Vancouver. For more information, go here.

02/11/2026

Listen to Dina Goldstein's interview on CBC's NXNW in conversation with Margaret Gallagher. And then come hear her tomorrow Feb 12, 7:00pm at the Jewish Community Centre of Greater Vancouver!

Great article in Jewish Independent  about Dina Goldstein and her upcoming pre-festival event on Feb 12, 7:00pm at the J...
01/23/2026

Great article in Jewish Independent about Dina Goldstein and her upcoming pre-festival event on Feb 12, 7:00pm at the Jewish Community Centre of Greater Vancouver!

The power of photography 0 Flares 0 Flares × “Elaborate Pride Costume, Gay Pride,” Vancouver, 1996. (© Dina Goldstein) One of the JCC Jewish Book Festival pre-festival events holds special meaning for the Jewish Independent. Photographer Dina Goldstein, whose artistry has focused on large-scal...

Congratulations to all shortlisted authors, very proud to feature some of the nominees in our upcoming festival!  Can't ...
01/15/2026

Congratulations to all shortlisted authors, very proud to feature some of the nominees in our upcoming festival! Can't wait to hear Yishay Ishi Ron talk about his stunning novel Dog and Douglas Century present about Crash of the Heavens.

Yesterday, we were thrilled to announce the shortlist for the 75th National Jewish Book Awards. As the longest-run­ning North Amer­i­can awards pro­gram of its kind, the Nation­al Jew­ish Book Awards cel­e­brate the writ­ers, schol­ars, and sto­ry­tellers whose work illu­mi­nates Jew­ish life, his­to­ry, cul­ture, and ideas. See the full list here. Winners and finalists will be announced in February. https://bit.ly/3ZcgJ7f

We hope you'll join us on March 25 in NYC at our 75th National Jewish Book Awards Gala to honor these awardees. Jonah Platt, host of the world’s #1 Jew­ish cul­ture pod­cast, will be the host for the event. Learn more here. https://bit.ly/4qRy9Sr

Discover our 2026 JCC Jewish Book Festival and join us for exciting events! Our mission—to expose the general community ...
01/12/2026

Discover our 2026 JCC Jewish Book Festival and join us for exciting events! Our mission—to expose the general community to a curated snapshot of recent Jewish literature and ideas—feels more essential now than ever.

This interactive flipbook is created with FlippingBook, a service for streaming PDFs online. No download, no waiting. Open and start reading right away!

Comic by Tom Gauld, thanks to Vancouver Writers Fest !And stay tuned for our February 2026 festival full lineup, coming ...
12/22/2025

Comic by Tom Gauld, thanks to Vancouver Writers Fest !
And stay tuned for our February 2026 festival full lineup, coming up really soon! Happy holidays and Happy New Year!

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Jewish Community Centre Of Greater Vancouver
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