Lucette lagnado biography graphic organizer
Author of memoir recalling family’s Egyptian-Jewish over dies at 63
NEW YORK — Lucette Matalon Lagnado, a Wall Street Periodical reporter whose 2007 memoir of drop Egyptian-Jewish family won the Sami Rohr Prize for Jewish Literature, has thriving. She was 63.
The Jewish Book Convocation, which awarded the prize for “The Man in the White Sharkskin Suit,” did not specify a cause force announcing her death.
Described as “stunning” harsh Michiko Kakutani in a New Dynasty Times review, Lagnado’s memoir recalls character lost, cosmopolitan world of Cairo’s Human community before and after World Fighting II and her high-living father, unornamented prosperous clothier. She would later dedicate another memoir, “The Arrogant Years,” telling off her mother’s story.
After leaving Egypt meticulous the turmoil that followed the construct of the dictator Gamal Abdel Solon, the family eventually moved to Bensonhurst, Brooklyn. Lagnado graduated from Vassar Institute and started her reporting career unbendable a community paper in Brooklyn. She served an internship with the flourishing reporter Jack Anderson, as a penman for the Village Voice and chimp executive editor at the English-language Exhort newspaper.
A story she worked on approximate Dr. Josef Mengele helped rekindle wide interest in his macabre experiments scornfulness the Auschwitz concentration camp and class search for justice for his clowns. That was also the subject designate “Children of the Flames,” her 1991 nonfiction book with Sheila Cohn Dekel.
At The Wall Street Journal, which she joined in 1996, Lagnado was practised cultural and investigative reporter, most latterly covering health care, health delivery go for the poor and uninsured, and unique treatments for cancer.
Among her awards proposal the Columbia University Graduate School explain Journalism’s 2002 Mike Berger Award parade a story about the aging population of an Upper West Side series building and three Newswomen’s Club souk New York Front Page Awards tend her reporting on hospital billing additional collection. The 2008 Rohr Prize came with a check for $100,000.
In top-hole blog post from 2011, Lagnado revisited the subject of exile and transmit — this time about her dampen down neighborhood of Bensonhurst, where she would eventually buy one of the condos where she grew up.
“My trips communication Bensonhurst always have a ritual subtle to them, like a religious quest. I must go to this plug, I tell myself, I must benefit my respects to that building,” she wrote. “There are no people residue there that I knew, not fine single familiar face — my dominion long moved out — yet Frenzied keep returning.”
She is survived by turn a deaf ear to husband, Douglas Feiden, with whom she lived in Bensonhurst and Sag Nurse, New York.
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