Lines We Draw

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A01=Tim Franks
ancestors
antisemitism
Author_Tim Franks
bayeux
bbc
biography
birmingham
Category=DNC
Category=DNP
Category=KNTP2
Category=QRJ
Category=WQY
cheder
diaspora
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
family history
gaza
geneaology
history
international reportage
jew
jewish
journalist
judaism
lisbon
memoir
newshour
reporter
today programme
war
world service

Product details

  • ISBN 9781399423083
  • Weight: 500g
  • Dimensions: 162 x 238mm
  • Publication Date: 03 Jul 2025
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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'What makes this brilliant, considered book worthwhile is not its breadth but how thoughtful it is.'
Financial Times

'The book is stunning. He is an extraordinary writer. Such erudition. Wisdom. Humanity. And humour. '
Fergal Keane, BBC News

Tim Franks spent years as the BBC’s Middle East Correspondent covering Israel and the occupied Palestinian territories. During that time, he was attacked as a self-hating Jew and as an Islamophobe – as a tool of competing, malign agendas. He always tried to respond with a journalist’s detached curiosity, drawing a clear line between his identity and his work. Up to the point that he asked himself: is that necessary? Beyond the judgments of others: what does it mean to be Jewish?

It was a question he struggled to answer. As a child in 1970s Birmingham, Tim was a practising Jew with hardly any relations or sense of lineage. And so he embarked on a search for his ancestral roots, from Constantinople to Curaçao, from Amsterdam to the death camps, from Lithuania to Downing Street.

Framing each part of his journey through what he has learned as a journalist, Tim discovers ancestors who all speak to a part of the Jewish story: there are the refugees and the risk-takers; the artists, rabbis, soldiers and revolutionaries; there is even a route to the Conservative Party’s unlikeliest leader, Benjamin Disraeli.

This book is a deeply empathetic memoir which encourages us all to confront the lines we draw.

Tim Franks has presented Newshour, the flagship news and current affairs programme on the BBC World Service, since 2013. Before that, he spent almost 20 years as a reporter, nine of them as a foreign correspondent, covering several major conflicts. He cut his teeth reporting on the Troubles in Northern Ireland and became the Today programme’s special political correspondent.

Tim won one of the most prestigious international war-reporting awards – the Bayeux – for his coverage of war in Gaza.

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