Arnold Zable is an award winning writer, storyteller, educator, and human
rights advocate. Formerly a lecturer in the Arts Faculty in Melbourne
University, Zable has worked in the USA, Papua New Guinea, China, and many
parts of Europe and Southeast Asia. His books include Jewels and Ashes,
(Scribe, 1991) which won five Australian literary awards, and depicts his
journey to Poland to trace his ancestry. Jewels and Ashes was also published
in the USA by Harcourt Brace in 1993. Wanderers and Dreamers, (Hyland House,
1998) is a book of tales that depict the history of Yiddish theatre in
Australia. Zablešs best selling novel, Cafe Scheherazade, (Text, 2001)
depicts the lives of former refugees who now meet in a coffee shop in a seaside
suburb in Melbourne. The Fig Tree, (Text, 2002) is a book of true stories
set in Greece, Eastern Europe, inner Melbourne and outback Australia. The Fig
Tree CD, a musical companion to the book, won the National Folk Recording
award in 2004. His novel Scraps of Heaven, (Text, 2004) is set
in the post-war immigrant community of the Melbourne suburb, Carlton. His latest novel Sea of Many Returns, was published by Text in June 2008.
Zable is the author of numerous feature articles, columns, short stories,
reviews and essays. His work regularly appears in The Age and a range of
journals. He has written several works for theatre, and was a co-writer of the
play Kan Yama Kan, in which asylum seekers tell their stories.
Zable speaks and writes with passion about memory and history, displacement and
community. He has conducted numerous writing workshops and has been a visiting
lecturer in creative writing at Deakin, Melbourne, Monash, RMIT, La Trobe and
Victoria Universities.
Zable is a compelling storyteller who has performed in many venues in
Melbourne, Sydney, Perth, Hobart, Adelaide and regional areas. His shows include
Wanderers & Dreamers, tales of Yiddish theatre, and more recently, Anytime The
Wind Can Change, tales of immigrant journeys, performed with singer-songwriter
Kavisha Mazzella. In 1998 he worked with curators to produce the script for
Victoria's Immigration Museum.
He is a patron of the Eastweb Foundation and the Victorian Storytellers
Guild, a member of the Immigration Museum Advisory Committee, and President of International PEN Melbourne.
He was recently awarded a doctorate in the School of Creative Arts, Melbourne University.
