Tessa Szyszkowitz in conversation with Yishai Sarid
CHAMÄLEON
Israel is changing, how is this reflected in its literature?
Yishai Sarid has dealt with the psychological situation of the Israelis society in previous books. In “Monster” he dealt with the deep influence of the Holocaust on the thinking of Israelis. In his newest one, “Chamäleon”, he turns to the question how right-wing populist policies are changing Israel. And how October 7th has fundamentally changed Israel. The reaction to October 7th polarises the society, it radicalizes government politics, it also creates rifts within families. The fictional family in “Chamäleon” goes through this process with main character, the journalist Shai Tamus, being promoted by the Prime minister, slips into darker right wing conspiracy theories, while his wife and daughter join the protests against the government.
In August 2025 Yishai Sarid signed an Israeli Artists’ petition to stop the atrocities against the civilian population in Gaza and to stop the war. He also spoke at demonstrations held in Israel against the right-wing government and its policies. As son of the left-wing politician Yossi Sarid the author grew up in a Zionist family committed to peace with Palestinians. Sarid addresses recent events in the political developments and the changes in Israelis society: How has the memory of the Holocaust been used to shape Israeli identity and how important is the critical discourse on historiography in a country with different narratives and claims to a land at this crucial moment in Israeli history, when different concepts of Zionism – from liberal secular to national-religious extremes – clash?
Yishai Sarid, born in Tel Aviv in 1965, is a lawyer and novelist. The award-winning author – the Bernstein Prize, the Brenner Prize, and the Levi Eshkol Literary Award for Hebrew literature, and in France, the Grand prix de littérature policière – wrote bestsellers like “Monster” and “Schwachstellen”. His latest book “Chamäleon” was published in September 2025 in German. Sarid lives in Tel Aviv.
Tessa Szyszkowitz is an author and journalist living in London. She writes for the Austrian weekly Falter and occasionally for the German daily Tagesspiegel and the Swiss NZZ am Sonntag. Her latest book was “Echte Engländer – Britain and Brexit” (2018).


