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Sara Nelson Blog | 12/30/2008 1:35 pm

Not Again! Herman Rosenblat's 'Angel' Tests Patience, by Sara Nelson

By Sara Nelson

Editor’s Note: Sara Nelson is the editor in chief of Publisher’s Weekly, the industry’s leading news source, covering every aspect of creating, producing, marketing and selling the written word in book, audio, video and electronic formats.

It is a truism about holidays that they can be hell on families: those crazy relatives whose peccadilloes you can defend from a distance all year long are suddenly in your face, and harder to take. And so it was for me last week when I heard the news — first reported by Gabriel Sherman in the New Republic, though rumors of the story have been circulating on the Internet for some time — that a publisher had bought, defended and, finally, dumped a Holocaust memoir that “turned out” to be a fake. “Oh, there they go again,” I thought, not terribly kindly, thinking back, of course to the Freys and Selzers, et al. Except this time, I didn’t feel so forgiving of my people.

But let me be clear: My annoyance is not so much with Herman Rosenblat, the Buchenwald survivor who has now admitted that he made up the story — praised by none other than Oprah Winfrey — about the “angel at the fence,” the girl who supposedly tossed him apples and then, miraculously, reappeared in his life 12 years later (on a blind date, no less). I have never talked to Rosenblat and I wouldn’t presume to know how memory works, especially in people who have suffered the trauma of the Holocaust. (There have, of course, been other famous survivors — Jerzy Kosinski comes to mind — whose memories turned out to be factually faulty.) No — the culprit here is, plain and simple, our own beloved book business. How, after so many fake-memoir scandals of very recent vintage, could no one at Berkley have asked the kind of question that any intelligent 12-year-old would ask. To wit: “Wow, that’s a bunch of wild coincidences — did this really happen?” But apparently, though the book had to have been seen and read by dozens of people, nobody asked it.

What’s infuriating about this is not only that it opens the floodgates, again, to all the usual criticisms of BookLand: that publishers don’t fact check, that we’re only in search of the holy buck, that we’re either willfully blind or just plain stupid. What’s infuriating about it is that when the book business needs all the help it can get, we’re sabotaging ourselves. The traditional-house model is being challenged on all sides — by digital forces, by self-publishers, by the economy — so to lose sight of our most esteemed function as guarantor of authenticity is unforgivable. What’s more, we are in danger of alienating one of our greatest boosters. “I’m afraid we’re going to lose Oprah,” one publisher e-mailed me, suggesting that the talk-show host might give up touting books altogether for fear of further fakes.

Come on, people. How hard would it have been to say Angel was “based on a true story” (which is what the children’s book version, Angel Girl, says — though that, too, has now been pulled by its publisher)? Did no one look to the success of, say, The Reader and The Boy in the Striped Pajamas (both Holocaust stories, both fiction, and now both successful motion pictures) and suggest Rosenblat at least call his story a fable?

That publishing was either too blind, too stupid or too arrogant to consider such moves is, to me, the most worrisome fact of all. I’m no Oprah, but I love the book business — and I’m losing my patience.

56 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

kermie b
Not just the publishing business—Oprah should fact check—I’m sure she has the money for staffing. Or maybe any publicity is good publicity for her. I haven’t seen her show in ages; IMO it got boring. I think she does great deeds for people in need. What she needs is to revamp her image.
By kermie b on 12/30/2008 2:47 pm
Andy C
Kermie, I do agree. Oprah has become a cartoon image of herself and the show quite boring and redundant. She does do a lot with her money and fame, but she is quite impressed with herself as well. I’ve stopped watching her a long time ago. It is appalling that these books are accepted at face value without checking. Call fiction “fiction”, it may still be a good read. Quite often I’ve read a novel and experienced a feeling that it was probably based on fact.
By Andy C on 12/31/2008 6:50 am
rocky rocky
Oh I so agree, Ms Nelson. Book publishing is an art, and if the people who do it are more concerned about the suits and sharks than about their own commitment to excellence, there’s no chance it can survive. Fate and I conspired to pull myself out of the worst of it quite some time ago. Although working on my own sometimes can be more than challenging, it is always rewarding. (More often than I ever expected, I feel so proud to have collaborated with dedicated giving brilliantly creative folks.) Worth it all. Best to you for the new year and please! keep on writing for wOw!
By rocky rocky on 12/30/2008 3:38 pm
Brooklyn Gal
Kermie, Sorry but Oprah is not supposed to fact-check. That’s the publisher’s job. Sara, who is in this business is correct. It’s the greed of the business. If we stop losing our faith in what publishers put out, the book industry will suffer. Oprah has done more for book sales and deserves to be respected by publishers and authors alike.
By Brooklyn Gal on 12/30/2008 3:52 pm
kermie b
Bklyn—I am painfully aware of fact checking, editing, etc., in publishing, it’s my job. What I meant, but didn’t phrase well enough, was Oprah has been stung a few times to my knowledge. She needs to “check” what she endorses before she becomes a laughingstock. She does so many good deeds otherwise, I truly would hate to see that happen. That’s all I meant.
By kermie b on 12/31/2008 12:44 am
Brooklyn Gal
I so totally disagree with everything you have stated. When it comes to books already published, it’s your job, not hers to check the facts. She is in the entertainment industry not a fact-checker. If a book gets published, one should trust the publisher. I for one do not hold Oprah responsible for this and she is not the laughingstock IMO . She is not plugging detergent. She is only recommending a book she found fascinating. If she was stung, so were all the people who bought the book before Oprah recommended it. Just because she has money doesn’t mean she should launch an investigation. She is not an investigative journalist either. Should she decide not to highlight any new books, people like you can be out of a job because she has helped revitalize the publishing industry. So I have to blame fact-checkers in the publishing industry for not doing the job they are paid to do.
By Brooklyn Gal on 12/31/2008 1:07 am
Tee Zee
You said it better than I B.G.! I think is is representative of the larger problem of no one being accountable of their actions and a public that is not demanding action and accepting an inferior product.
By Tee Zee on 12/31/2008 8:56 am
kermie b
Fact-checkers and editors don’t have a crystal ball. If the author wants to fool people, he can throw in just enough authentic details to make his story seem conceivable. There is a hierarchy of blame, and many people whose hands a book passes through. The fact-checker is not the be-all and end-all. The sub-editor sitting in an office gets a salary—no more. There are lawyers, and layers of other people to get through. The publisher profits by pumping out as much as possible. The publisher is to be blamed, not the person in a backroom who has deadlines piled on top of each other. Please try to get your facts straight.
By kermie b on 12/31/2008 12:28 pm
Brooklyn Gal
I think you should read the comments as well as the posts that agrees with me. I have stated all along that publishers and not Oprah are responsible, and I don’t agree with your comment that it should fall on Oprah. Fact-checking is a part of publishing so maybe the way it has to be done needs changing. My facts are right when I say it’s NOT Oprah’s responsibility and that is my only problem with your comments.
By Brooklyn Gal on 12/31/2008 12:37 pm
kermie b
Okay, New Year! I am just saying that publishing involves layers of people! I never use exclamation points.
By kermie b on 01/01/2009 12:15 am
Brooklyn Gal
Kermie, Yes, it is a new year, so I don’t understand your comment about the exclamation points since I did not use them with you. I have always enjoyed your comments. But when you stated on this post and another that Oprah should be fact-checking these books, I had to disagree with you and said that responsibility belonged to the publishers. Then you went on to say that you work in publishing which totally surprised me because you were so intent on putting the responsibility of fact-checking on Oprah. So I will ask you again to explain your original comments which was… why do you think Orpah should have this responsibility? Sorry, but I just don’t get your point. If a new car is defective, is it up to the consumer to conduct and pay for their own safety tests before they purchase it? The liability rightfully belongs to the manufacturer. And yes, there are many levels. I don’t disagree there. But, the manufacturer is still the one responsible. And in this case, the publisher is too. So why should Orpah bear the burden of doing the investigation after a book is published?
By Brooklyn Gal on 01/01/2009 6:55 am
beth willis
Then Oprah needs to announce at the time she recommends a memoir, this may not be entirely actually true. Why use the term ‘memoir’, which is one’s memory of experience rather than ‘auto or ‘biography’, which is the factual story of one’s life.? No one is a laughingstock, what a funny word…….I assume the person is placed in stocks while passersby laugh at him/her. You are correct that Oprah is in the entertainment business, and , if only she could get her ego out of the way, she could stop recommending books or state that the book was accurate enough to engage her BUT she doesn’t. I never watch Oprah anymore, but acknowledge she has done some good works. Too often she exploits the pain of victims of horrific experience. She’s at her best when she features entertainers, their talent or personal struggles as they choose. But always with the the great singing of the Divas and not so much of ,’How was your self-esteem affected when you were forced to eat a diet of worms, while dressed in a burlap sack?’ Why doesn’t Oprah put the book aside if she has an inkling the book is not totally accurate? I just find it interesting that She reads these books and is none the wiser. Just recommend novels or books of poetry. The essence and possibility of the memoir genre is all I require; fact-checking is not in my pay grace. Peace and grace
By beth willis on 01/01/2009 4:39 pm
Brooklyn Gal
Beth, I am not sure if I am picking up an anti-Oprah comment or a comment about the publishing industry here. If she would make such a statement as you recommend, wouldn’t that open her up to a liable suit?? (Remember the beef incident). The problem I am having with Kermie is that she said a few times that Oprah should use her money to fact-check books. I think that the publisher’s responsibility. My opinion about Oprah personally does not have anything to do with this topic of discussion. I too have stopped watching Oprah, but again I would have to disagree with you. If a person writes an account of their lives and it is published, how is Oprah or anyone who buys the book supposed to have doubts. Did Oprah have an inkling that this Holocaust story wasn’t totally accurate? Please site your source. (btw, don’t you consider books a source of entertainment? Many movies are based on them.) Laughingstock came from another comment on the other thread. I disagreed with that assumption too. I think it’s the media just trying to put down Oprah. I also said on the other thread that Oprah may just avoid all memoirs and also stick with fiction. But how many good stories would be lost to the American public if that were to happen? A memoir is a “moment in time”. It is a genre. It does not reflect one’s whole life like a biography or autobiography. My absolutely favorite book of all time is Owl Moon by Jane Yolen. It is a must read for all children. It is written like a memoir but labeled fiction. That’s the difference. A publisher labels the books, not the reader. If I am going to spend $25 for a memoir that got a good write-up in the Times, I like the reviewer, am going to think the story is true. So I have no idea what you mean by “inkling”. Hope you have a happy new year!
By Brooklyn Gal on 01/01/2009 6:37 pm
Brooklyn Gal
Oops! Meant to write “libel” suit.
By Brooklyn Gal on 01/01/2009 6:40 pm
beth willis
Brookly Girl, I wrote a lengthy response but it’s floating in cyberspace somewhere. I will try again tomorrow. You’s post is excellent. Peace and grace
By beth willis on 01/01/2009 11:47 pm