Lily Perry (Hebrew: לילי פרי; born 1953) is an Israeli writer, novelist, editor, and critic.
[3] Perry started writing professionally in 1973 as a journalist and editor in HaOlam HaZeh, Al HaMishmar and Yedioth Ahronoth, which was Israel's largest newspaper by circulation.
[12] Her book, “Swans in Jerusalem beach”, was included among the twelve finalists in the long list of Sapir Prize 2020.
[13] Prof. Gabriel Moked delineated her artistic perspective and themes: "This author is one of the most promising forces in our literature… One of the main spirits in our feminine literature… More than any other narrator, she deals with the socio-economic spheres in Israel… Her novels depict a salient female character… Who is struggling in her social realms… The male characters are divided into two categories: the first category is "the bad guys" who misunderstand the women and strive to control them in relationships or public officials or mobs that get in the female's way and make their lives hard.
Sometimes, we can understand who his voice is, and more frequently, it seems like an anonymous point of view, at least at first sight; as the novel developed, the figure's nature unraveled.