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Archive for category Jewish Books
Add Some Religion to Your Summer Reading
Posted by Rachel Broder in Jewish Books on June 29, 2011
I have decided that I owe JPS blog readers my version of a summer reading list. I have been spending my summer with a fair amount of Hemingway, but For Whom the Bell Tolls is probably not JPS material. Rather than provide you with a list of only Jewish-oriented novels that you’ve already read, I want to also share a few more broadly religious or spiritual works. You may have read some of these, you may be avoiding some of these, but hopefully I can encourage you to make a few new friends.
- The Plot Against America – Not necessarily Philip Roth’s best or best-known work, but a really excellent choice for the summer. The novel imagines Charles Lindbergh defeating FDR in the 1940 election and the ensuing repercussions. Check out this terrific article on Roth published in last week’s Financial Times too.
- A Passage to India OR Howard’s End - I have a huge thing for E.M. Forster because my senior seminar focused on him and Virginia Woolf. A lot of people fear Forster’s works, but I am here to tell you that they are worth pushing through. Both A Passage to India and Howard’s End have underlying mystical feeling to them. A Passage to India also incorporates elements of both Islam and Hinduism.
- A Portrait of An Artist as Young Man – I know what you’re thinking: James Joyce as a summer read? Listen, Portrait’s third chapter is one the most frightening and vivid depictions of religion I have ever come across in a novel. It gets all “Sinners in the Hands of an Angry G-d” coupled with religious retreat on you.
- The Color of Water – A superb memoir of a black man tracing the roots of his white and Jewish mother, this novel was on my personal summer reading list a few years back. I think I read the entire novel in less than two days- absolutely stunning.
- The Old Man and the Sea – Though Hemingway’s novels are not terribly religious, The Old Man and the Sea has a certain spiritual feel to it. I read the novella over the course of a few hours this past week and found myself oddly swept up in the old man’s inner counseling of self. His dreaming and chatting are therapeutic and read like dialogue between self and spirit.
- Need a break from novels? Try some poetry. Adhering to my religiously themed list, here are a few works you can try:
- Pick up anything by William Blake, but start with Songs of Innocence and Experience (try to find the copy with Blake’s really beautiful engravings).
- Again, anything by Leonard Cohen. Before this spring, the only work of Leonard Cohen’s I knew was “Hallelujah” (which I used to play repeatedly on the piano). Upon reading “These Heroics” in April, I immediately became a Leonard Cohen fan and am now playing catch-up.
- Read and share Elizabeth Barrett Browning’s Sonnets from the Portuguese. The sonnets are heavy with religious allusion, yet also extremely beautiful as expressions of love.
What are your favorite religious-oriented novels or works of poetry?
A Poetry Contest With A Powerful Subject
Posted by Rachel Feltman in Jewish Books, Jewish Innovation, Jewish Knowledge, Publishing on January 17, 2011
Are you a poet? A historian? A social activist? The Forward is holding a commemorative contest that you might be interested in. From now until February 14th, The Forward is accepting poems that reflect on the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire.
Nearly one hundred years ago, the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory in New York City caught fire. While the source of the blaze is still a topic for debate, the outcome was tragic from any viewpoint. With 146 people killed, the Triangle Factory disaster remains the deadliest industrial accident to occur in New York.
In the aftermath of the fire, a lot of questions were raised about the rights of American factory workers. After all, most of the victims of the fire died because their only exit had been locked to prevent people from leaving their posts early. Worse, the workers on the upper floors had no warning, as the building had no alarm system.
Morris Rosenfeld, known as the “poet laureate of the slum and the sweatshop,” wrote a poem to express the grief of the city. The Jewish Daily Forward published it, running it down the length of the paper’s front page. The press was key in initiating a lawsuit against the factory owners, which in turn pushed the nation to demand safety regulation in industry.
One century later, what difference has the Triangle Fire made? What was the tragedy’s legacy? Did it facilitate change, or did the country only react superficially?
The Forward is seeking original, unpublished poems reflecting on these questions. Entries can be in Yiddish or English, and must be submitted by February 14th, 2011 at 5 pm EST. Please see the above link for rules, terms, and conditions.
You can find out more about the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory here. For inspiration, here’s Morris Rosenfeld’s original poem. Spread the word, and best of luck to all who choose to submit their work!
Mark Your Calendar For The Global Day Of Jewish Learning!
Posted by Rachel Feltman in Jewish Books, Jewish Knowledge on October 27, 2010

Remember what I said about the lack of distracting holidays between September and the end of November? I’ve been proven wrong, and I’m not talking about Halloween (or the day after, though I do encourage you to grab that candy while it’s cheap).
November 7th is the Global Day of Jewish Learning. The day is intended to celebrate the culmination of Rabbi Adin Steinsaltz’s translating of the Talmud, an undertaking that has taken five decades. Based on Rabbi Steinsaltz’s driving belief…that the texts belong to anyone who wishes to study them… the Global Day of Jewish Learning will encourage people around the world to come together and study.
If you want to know more about why and how the completion of a translation is supposed to be celebrated, Rabbi Steinsaltz explains the concept of a Siyyum beautifully. As he explains on the Global Day website, the idea of the siyyum is an acknowledgement of completion, but also a promise of eventual return to the texts that have been translated.
Because of the groundbreaking nature of this work on the Talmud, which was the first to make the text truly accessible to everyone, and not just master scholars, its celebration will be focused on community learning. My favorite thing about the Global Day concept is that it really is meant for everyone. Anyone interested is encouraged to go to one of the many events being held across the world, and there are ways to participate online, too! Answer some of the “Big Questions” being discussed, or ask your own on the Global Day website.
Check out the website if you’re interested in attending an event, hosting one, or just finding out more details. I’ll be joining in online…hope to see you there!
Jewish Book Carnival!
Posted by Alx in Jewish Books, Jewish Knowledge, JPS Books, Link Roundup on September 15, 2010
This month, to start the New Year off with a bang, we are hosting the Jewish Book Carnival! Started by Heidi Estrin and Marie Cloutier to build strength in the Jewish-book-blogosphere, JPS has collected a series of links to share with you: 
JBooks: The Jewish Manuscript Project: “Poem in the Prophetic Manner.”
LibrarysCat: Life in Biblical Israel
rhapsodyinbooks: Sunday Salon – Review of “The Yiddish Policeman’s Union,”
Beliefnet: Baxter, the Pig Who Wanted to Be Kosher and Tashlich at Turtle Rock
Jewish Boston: Book Review: Broken Birds and Book Review: Queering the Text
Laurel Snyder: The Art of Beginning… Again. Renewel
Erika Dreifus: A Conversation with Allison Amend
Sylvia & Jeff Rouss: A Circle of Smiles for Beit Issie Shapiro
Sheryl Stahl: That one special High Holiday tune
The Fourth Musketeer:Top of FormBottom of Form Book Review: Annexed, by Sharon Dogar
She is Too Fond of Books: Children’s Book Review: *Baxter, the Pig Who Wanted to Be Kosher*
Jew Wishes: They Dared Return, Lest Innocent Blood be Shed, and Austerlitz, by W.G. Sebald
Jewish Book Council: High Holiday Reading
The Whole Megillah?”: Tashlich at Turtle Rock and Say Hello, Lily
The Book of Life: Book Expo 2010: Kids & Teens
AJL Blog: Recent Books about the Fall Holidays
AJL Podcast: What’s Hot in Israeli Literature?
Also, don’t forget to check out the Jewish Book Carnival Goodreads page
Writing Jewish Fiction
Posted by admin in Jewish Books on September 8, 2010
or how my novel became a non-bestseller (so far)
by Mark Binder
Half the Jewish people think my stories are too Jewish. The other half think they’re not Jewish enough. And non-Jewish people think that my stories are for Jews. Which means that my audience is mostly a guy named Leonard Klehr who lives in Cranston, RI on a fixed income. And my Mom.
I wish it were a joke, but it isn’t.
As you might imagine, it can be kind of frustrating. My Chelm series has won awards! The stories have been published around the world. I began writing them years ago when I was the editor of the Rhode Island Jewish Herald. On a deadline morning we had a hole in the newspaper, so I wrote a story to fill it. After I was fired for writing a Purim parody, “Transvestite Rabbis and the Women Who Love Them,” I continued writing stories of Chelm for Jewish newspaper in the US, Canada and even Australia.
Some of the stories were published in Cricket Magazine for children, but they weren’t written for kids. Or not just for kids. I write for all ages — because that’s who read Jewish newspapers: everyone from kids to seniors. And over the years, my villagers of Chelm began to change. The senior rabbi fell in love with the widowed caterer, and I produced a pamphlet about their romance called, “The Misadventures of Rabbi Kibbitz and Mrs. Chaipul.” I still have copies in the attic.
In 1999 I proposed that I write a novel of Chelm for the Houston Jewish Herald Voice. It would be serialized on a weekly basis. They said yes, and I began writing “The Brothers Schlemiel.”
It was a wonderful process. Every episode began with a hook and ended with a hook plus a “Next week…” The titles of the next episodes were meant to be enticing: “Oy” or “Termites on the Brain”
And because it was written over time, and targeted for specific weeks, the setting and characters changed with the seasons. A Hanukkah stand-alone story was reprinted in other papers.
I also began selling email subscriptions to the book, and recorded an audio edition, “The Brothers Schlemiel From Birth to Bar Mitzvah.” My fan base grew among non-Jews.
And when September 11 happened, I wrote my reactions into the book.
The original “Brothers Schlemiel” ran 100 weekly installments over a two-year period and ended when the two brothers separated for the final time. The book was sent to publisher after publisher before eight years later, JPS published the first part of “The Brothers Schlemiel” as a beautifully illustrated book for young people. Think the Wyeth editions of “Treasure Island.”
This edition tells the story of Abraham and Adam, the identical twins born in Chelm and confused from the day they were born until the moment that one of them (is it Abraham or Adam) is married. Along the way they get in and out of trouble, meet (and defeat) a robber, travel to Minsk (or was it Pinsk), fall in love, and deal with loss.
It’s not a story for kids. It’s not a story for adults. It’s not a story for Jews. It’s not too Jewish. (And it’s not Jewish enough.)
It’s a story that I wrote for everybody. It’s a novel that I think you’d enjoy.
Read an excerpt, and tell me if you’re not hooked.
Mark Binder is the author of “The Brothers Schlemiel.” His latest projects are two live audio story albums: “It was a dark and stormy night…” and “A Holiday Present” They’re not just for kids. They’re not just for Jews…. They’re funny (and fun) for everyone.
So Many Books, So Little Time!
Posted by Rachel Feltman in Jewish Books on August 30, 2010
If you’re like me, you started your summer with an overly ambitious reading list that’s been (mostly) neglected. Now that the time for beach reading is nearly done, you may find yourself staring woefully at a pile of almost-finished novels. Just be grateful that you didn’t try to start the season off with some Dostoyevsky. Trust me. Vowing to finish The Idiot in June is a great way to guarantee that you won’t finish anything by August.
So here’s your quest, should you choose to accept it: Knuckle down and finish something meaty before it’s fall. We’re talking a hardcore literature binge. No more teen vampire romances for us. If you need ideas, take a look at these:
- Let’s start with a list of underrated authors compiled by Publishers Weekly. I’m pretty sure I haven’t read the work of anyone on here, so I’ll definitely be looking them up! Don’t you love being the one to introduce an awesome book to your friends and coworkers?
- I’m really, really far behind if I want to read all the books suggested by JPS author Josh Lambert’s weekly column, On The Bookshelf, featured by Tablet Magazine. I do, though. Each of the books he highlights sound like they should be at the top of my list.
- Super Sad True Love Story has been all over the internet this summer. I can’t believe that I haven’t read it yet…dystopian literature has been my favorite since I stole The Giver from my sister in fourth grade! Clearly I’m a terrible, lazy person. I swear I just bought a copy. Shteyngart’s new novel, according to some, indicates that books by Russian-Jewish immigrants are now quite the thing. Here he is in a podcast with Joshua Cohen, author of Witz, discussing their individual takes on dystopian America as a book setting.
- Rachel Shukert is just a never ending source of hilarity. Her first memoir, in case you missed it, was Have You No Shame?, a witty and genuine look into her childhood as a Jewish girl in Nebraska and her attempts to break into acting in New York. She also wrote Everything’s Coming Up Moses: A Gypsy Seder, and juxtapositions of campy musicals and biblical tales are a genre I will support to the bitter end. Her second memoir, Everything Is Going To Be Great, chronicles her tour through Europe as a recent college graduate. To get an idea of what she’s all about, take a listen to this excerpt from Everything Is Going To Be Great.
What are you waiting for? Get off the internet and read! Well, first you should use the internet to procure reading material, and I suppose you might as well keep surfing while you wait for said book to arrive, but then you should hole up and read for as long as possible.
Israel: The Land of the Book
Posted by Elie in Jewish Books, Jewish Knowledge on August 25, 2010
The greasy smell of falafel, the floating sensation of the Dead Sea, and the remnants of a 2000-year-old wall. Take these three alluring features and mix in some history, panoramas, and religious importance, and it’s easy to understand why 2.7 million people in 2009 visited a country with a population of only 7 million.
With a broad appeal, Israel attracts tourists galore. And understandably, the summer season is most popular. Who wouldn’t prefer the sunny beaches of Tel Aviv to the comparably gloomy walls of their office? The summer break from school is also the ideal time for organized young adult trips to Israel such as those sponsored by Birthright Israel (www.birthrightisrael.com).
Oddly enough, I myself came back from Israel right before the start of summer, ending a year of living in the country. While there, I had the opportunity to explore its geographical diversity and beauty, to better understand its political complexity, and to encounter its historical richness.
But most importantly, I spent my year primarily studying, engaging my surroundings through an academic lens. Whether learning about the history of Judaism, tracing the roots of Zionism, reading modern Israeli literature, or learning about the intricacies of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, I found this the most fruitful way of interacting with and understanding this small parcel of land important to so many people. I emerged at the end of the year with a more mature and holistic perspective on Israel.
So for those of you heading to The Holy Land any time soon or those with hopeful aspirations to do so some time in the future, consider undertaking some form of study about Israel—if you’re desperate, just view it as some extra beach reading. It will make you ever-more appreciative of Israel’s richness.
If you’re not sure where to begin in your search for reading material, check out the following books on Israel-related topics:
• The Jerusalem Anthology: A Literary Guide, Reuven Hammer http://www.jewishpub.org/product.php?id=298
• A History of Israel: From the Rise of Zionism to Our Time, Howard M. Sachar
http://www.randomhouse.com/catalog/display.pperl?isbn=9780375711329
• The Zionist Idea, Arthur Hertzberg http://www.jewishpub.org/product.php?id=272
• Reinventing Jerusalem, Simone Ricca
http://books.google.com/books/ibtauris?id=Cbd1ALFq9hAC&printsec=frontcover&dq=jerusalem&cd=3#v=onepage&q&f=false
• Jerusalem Curiosities, Abraham E. Milgram
http://www.jewishpub.org/product.php?id=286
• Jerusalem, Lee Levine
http://www.jewishpub.org/product.php?id=101
A Literary Treasure Trove
Posted by Rachel Feltman in Jewish Books, Jewish Knowledge on July 26, 2010
Try not to freak out, but we might have some previously unreleased Kafka on our hands very soon. If you’re not excited, I’m guessing that you’ve never read any Kafka. I forgive you, but just take my word for it: this is a big deal.

Photo Credit: AP Photo
After his death in 1924, Franz Kafka’s personal papers and documents were left to his friend and fellow writer, Max Brod. When Brod died in 1968, ten safety deposit boxes full of papers (some his, some Kafka’s) were left to his secretary and friend, Esther Hoffe. The disputed ownership of these documents is what’s kept them hidden from the public for so long. Hoffe’s daughters seem to have legal ownership, but if the papers are deemed to be “literary treasures” by the judge who is currently examining them, then they could be released into the public domain.
Even if the judge rules in favor of the Hoffe family, chances are good that the papers will soon be published in some form. Some speculate that the boxes contain unpublished manuscripts by Kafka, considered one of the greatest writers of the 20th century, while others hope that personal documents will shed light on his mysterious life.
You can read more in Haaretz, the Israeli newspaper that filed the lawsuit to make these documents public. The New York Times also has an article on the subject, where they suggest that an unpublished short story was found in the first box.
Illuminated Manuscripts Illuminate Culture
Posted by Rachel Feltman in Jewish Books on July 21, 2010
Looking for a fun, cheap, and educational summer outing? The Yeshiva University Museum is currently hosting A Journey Through Jewish Worlds- Highlights from the Braginsky Collection of Hebrew Manuscripts and Printed Books, but only until August 1st! Here’s a little about the collection, from The New York Times:
“And as you examine these rare findings, which the curators bill as the most remarkable private collection of illuminated Hebrew manuscripts in the world, you are amazed first at the sensuous variety of the illumination, the examples extending over a millennium and across multiple continents. There are “micrographic” illustrations in which miniature lines of Hebrew text wind around images of Jerusalem or bend into a portrait of the biblical Samson. There are 18th-century documents from small Italian towns in which Renaissance putti find themselves the heralds of Jewish weddings. An illustrated scroll from early-20th-century India shows the Jewish story of Purim played out in Indian and Ottoman costume with macabre explicitness. Astrological signs and charts are found in a 14th-century scientific manuscript; they are also elements in marriage contracts or appear in centuries of Purim scrolls.”

Finding Moses, Charlotte van Rothschild Haggadah, 1842 Courtesy The Braginsky Collection
It’s extremely rare that such an extensive collection be made available to the public, especially in the US! The pieces provide fascinating insight into Jewish culture around the world, and throughout different time periods, by showing how art and religion were brought together.
The Yeshiva University Museum, located in the flatiron district of New York, has the manuscripts on view through August 1st. Admission for adults is only $8, and you can also take advantage of their free admission hours on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday from 5-8 pm.
While you’re there, be sure to stop by another exhibit- Drawing on Tradition: The Book of Esther features illustrations from JPS author JT Waldman’s graphic novel Megillat Esther. Drawing on Tradition will be on display until August 15th.
Top 5 Jewish Book to Film Adaptations
Posted by Rachel Feltman in Jewish Books on July 6, 2010
I once had a professor wax poetic on a quote about love and marriage that he couldn’t remember the source of. He rattled off the titles of some classic literature, sure it was from a famous novel. It took me about three seconds to realize it was actually from Fiddler on the Roof.
The past century has seen a lot of great Jewish film, in America and elsewhere. Here are some movies, all based on or inspired by Jewish literature, that you should add to your “must see” list.
Don’t take my word for it…I’ve included each film’s “freshness” rating from rottentomatoes.com, which compiles all available reviews to find what percentage of viewers enjoyed a film.
The Jazz Singer (1927)-
This film wasn’t just a breakthrough in Jewish cinema, or even in American cinema, but in the very art of film itself. The story is a classic one that has become all too familiar: An American Jewish man must reconcile his modern dreams with the traditional wishes of his father. What makes this film really exceptional is its use of sound. The Jazz Singer was the first feature-length film to use synchronized sound and dialogue. Although only about two minutes of dialogue are actually spoken aloud, the feat wowed audiences around the world and encouraged the ascent of the talkie. The film is adapted from a stage play of the same name, which was based on the story “The Day of Atonement” by Samson Raphaelson. Rotten Tomatoes Rating: 76%

Gentleman’s Agreement (1947)-
Based on Laura Z. Hobson’s book of the same name, Gentleman’s Agreement is a well deserving award winner and classic. The plot follows Phillip Green, a journalist moving to New York with his son and mother. Looking for an angle for his piece on anti-semitism, Green decides to become a Greenburg and experience the discrimination first hand. The bigotry directed at he and his family, and the anti-Jewish sentiments that many characters (including Green’s girlfriend, and a woman who is actually Jewish) take for granted, paint a blunt picture of American anti-semitism. The honesty of the film got the attention of the House Un-American Activities Committee, which lead to the black-listing of two of its actors. Rotten Tomatoes Rating: 83%

Goodbye, Columbus (1969)-
This Phillip Roth adaptation is considered by many to be the best of them, and an underrated gem of American film. The movie explores class tension between American Jews, instead of focusing on their relations with gentiles. Neil and Brenda represent two sides of American Judaism in mid-twentieth century America. Neil is intelligent, working class, and comes from an observant family. Brenda is a stereotypical Jewish American Princess, with a rich, athletic family to match. The ups and downs of their affair shed light on extreme assimilation, and how it can look to those who haven’t assimilated themselves. Rotten Tomatoes Rating: 100% (wow)
Enemies, a Love Story (1989)-
The book, by Isaac Bashevis Singer, was originally published in The Jewish Daily Forward (in Yiddish, not English) in 1966. Paul Mazursky’s adaptation manages to be poignant, blunt, and sometimes even quite funny. When we meet Herman, he’s having enough trouble balancing two women (His wife, the Polish servant who saved his life by hiding him through the war, and his mistress, a volatile fellow survivor), but when his first wife, presumed dead, comes to America, he must weave an intricate web to keep his three loves content. Rotten Tomatoes Rating: 91%

Everything is Illuminated (2005)-
My personal favorite. It’s rare that I love both a book and its film adaptation, but Jonathan Safran Foer’s debut novel was lucky enough to end up in the capable hands of Live Schreiber (who both adapted the screenplay and directed). This is a film that manages to balance drama and comedy exquisitely. Elijah Wood plays Jonathan, a quirky writer and collector of family trinkets and photos. A mysterious woman in one of these photos prompts him to travel to the Ukraine in search of his grandfather’s village. His guide is the over-the-top Alex (played by musician Eugene Hutz), whose confident misuses of the English language make up the funniest lines in the film. The discoveries they both make, about themselves and both of their families, drives the plot of the film. Rotten Tomatoes Rating: 67%
Have another favorite that I didn’t mention? I sure hope you do, because this is an awfully short list. Comment with your favorite Jewish film!





