Posts Tagged Books

The Gift of Books

ebookanoid.com

I went to the bookstore to buy a book for a friend today. I had to weave through people, ask employees to look for a copy of the book in the back room, and then wait in line. I’m used to wandering into the store on Sunday, lazily combing through the aisles and then easing up to counter and out the door without having to say “excuse me” once. I go to the bookstore almost every weekend. Usually I like the peace and quite of the bookstore, but today’s buzz and borderline chaos were unexpectedly pleasant. The combination of the holiday shopping season and the closing of Borders earlier this year created what was my most hectic bookstore experience in a long time.

I’ve read countless articles this year about the predicted extinction of books, but also of the book world going full circle from small bookshops, to retail, back to small. I read the articles and compared them to my own experiences with the closing of the Borders in the city and the two near my parents’ house in the suburbs, realizing that the book world was certainly changing whether I liked it or not. I’ve felt a shared sadness with other book lovers over the past year, searching for a way to keep the love of literature alive so that books can be available to younger generations. I’ve felt a different kind of sadness as e-Books have taken storm and the Nook and Kindle became more prevalent around me on my morning commute to work. Today was the first day I didn’t feel any of that sadness when I was in the bookstore.

What I realized today is that books are still among the most popular gifts. Books appeal to a variety of people in ways that few other objects can- they’re living, breathing pieces that readers ingest and interpret in their own way. Books are durable in material and wisdom, traits that few toys or sweaters can boast. It made me so overwhelmingly joyous to watch shoppers select books for others based on preference, popularity, or mere chance. Though the future of books is certainly still daunting for me, today’s experience in the bookstore set my mind at ease. When the cashier asked me if I needed a gift receipt for my book, I told her absolutely not for I was sure that I had made the right choice.

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So Many Books, So Little Time!

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.

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Calling Dibs on Culture

What makes a piece of artwork or literature too important to be privately owned? This is a complex issue that I’ve recently mentioned. The Kafka manuscripts that Israel fought for (and has, at least for the time being, won) were deemed to be “literary treasures”. This ruling meant that the legal owners of the manuscripts, who had inherited them indirectly, had no right to withhold the papers until they found a high enough bidder. Instead, the set of deposit boxes will be opened and made public by the Israel National Library.

What happens when the art in question was stolen from its owner during the war?

While most countries have done whatever possible to return lost and stolen property to victims of World War II, Hungary has kept dozens of paintings that belonged to Baron Mor Lipot Herzog, a Jewish art

The Agony In The Garden- El Greco (One of the stolen pieces)

collector, before the war. His family has had moderate success in tracking down and reclaiming pieces of his collection from Germany, but the vast majority of it was returned to Hungary decades ago and now hangs in museums there.

To me, at least, these issues seem pretty cut and dry. Society has too much to learn from any unread Kafka for it to stay in a locked box (though I would personally argue that there’s no reason the owners can’t receive compensation). On the other side of the public domain issue are the descendents of Herzog, who quite truly had their property stolen from them, and have stated that they’d be more than happy to let the museum keep some of the more culturally valuable pieces.

Usually literature passes into public possession because an author simply hasn’t set up a legal alternative, or so much time has passed that a clear owner can no longer be traced (I purse my lips at the thought of all the Pride and Prejudice “sequels” out there, but fair is fair). It’s rare that something is valuable enough for its own sake that governments fight to take it from living owners. Where do you think the line should be?

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A Literary Treasure Trove

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.

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Lost, But Not Forgotten

Biblical Archaeology Review

Last week, the New York Times reported that the ancient city of Aleppo, Syria had just laid out plans for a major historical restoration. Coincidentally, Aleppo is the setting of our latest book due out this week: Crown of Aleppo: The Mystery of the Oldest Hebrew Bible Codex by Hayim Tawil and Bernard Schneider. The book tells the incredible story of the Aleppo Codex, the most authoritative and accurate traditional Masoretic texts of the Bible. Because of its importance, it became known as the Crown of Aleppo. It traveled through Jerusalem and Cairo before finding a home at the Great Synagogue of Aleppo, Syria, where it remained until the synagogue was burned down in 1947. The Crown was believed to be lost forever, but it was discovered that most of it survived when it was smuggled into Israel in 1958 and later brought to its current home at the Israel Museum in Jerusalem.

The Crown of Aleppo is not the only historical text that was thought to be lost. The Dead Sea Scrolls are a collection of about 850 manuscripts, categorized as biblical, apocryphal, or sectarian, dating back to 250 B.C.E. through 68 C.E. They were discovered between 1947 and 1956 in eleven caves in Qumran, located on Dead Sea’s northwestern shores. Many scholars believe that the scrolls were written by a sect of Jews called the Essenes, who settled in the Judean Desert and disappeared after the Romans destroyed their settlements in 68 C.E. The Dead Sea Scrolls are now displayed in the Shrine of the Book at the Israel Museum located in Jerusalem.

A couple years ago, Geraldine Brooks published the award-winning People of the Book, a fictional history of a real text, the Sarajevo Haggadah. The Sarajevo Haggadah, one of the oldest Sephardic Haggadahs, was written in Barcelona around 1350. After the Spanish Expulsion in 1492 it was brought to Sarajevo. The Haggadah reappeared in 1894, when was sold to the National Museum in Sarajevo. Notes written in the margins of the book have given historians clues about the book’s travels during the 300 years the book was missing.  During World War II, the Haggadah was hidden from the Nazis by the museum’s librarian who smuggled it out of Sarajevo and brought it to a Muslim cleric to hide. Then, in the 1990s, the Haggadah disappeared again during the Bosnian civil war, when the museum was broken into. It was rediscovered in 1995 and has been on permanent display in the museum since 2002 thanks to the help of the United Nations and the Jewish community of Bosnia.

These texts have been crucial in our knowledge of Jewish history. In many ways they are like the Jewish people. They have overcome war and destruction, yet they still stand strong today as a source of inspiration for us and for future generations.

For more information on the Crown of Aleppo: http://www.aleppocodex.org/

To read an article about author Dr. Hayim Tawil: http://spider.mc.yu.edu/news/articles/article.cfm?id=102020

-Jill Finkelstein

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A JPS Take On LimmudPhilly

Last weekend was my first LimmudPhilly, but not my last. I’m hooked on this kind of learning fest experience.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/limmudphilly

Over 600 gathered at the Gershman Y and University of the Arts in Philadelphia for an evening and a day of conversation, learning, music, dance, and crafts, and eating, of course.  It began with the most exhilarating havdalah service I’ve ever attended: “Kosher Gospel” with pianist and singer Josh Nelson. And it ended with one of the most thought-provoking discussions I can remember on the Jewish concept of God. In between I found out why the Dead Sea Scrolls still matter (even though I knew they do, as I work on the JPS Lost Bible project); got a preview of the new National Museum of American Jewish History, opening this fall in Philadelphia; and listened to the Golem Psalms, a choral cantata based on the 16th century legend of the Golem of Prague.

But the session that most impressed me was the one on the changing nature of Jewish identity and community, because it confirmed what I see all around me: So many young Jews are looking beyond traditional ways of experiencing Judaism. They’re a diverse group who define themselves through self-expression, not through affiliation with one of the movements. They’re intellectually active, and they create social networks around their Jewish interests. In other words, the Limmud experience.

To find out more about Limmd programs around the US and world, go to www.limmudinternational.org

-Carol Hupping, Interim Director

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Lifting Spirits at LimmudPhilly

Marc Brettler, JPS author, guest blogs about his LimmudPhilly experience.

Scholarship is a very lonely venture—just me and my books.  I often wonder: Does anyone care?  But whenever I go to Limmud, my spirits are buoyed.

http://www.limmudphilly.org/

I just returned from LimmudPhilly—my third Limmud experience, though my first in the US.  (I earlier spoke at the first Limmud held in Cambridge, England, and at the big Limmud in the UK.)  What a blast.  Not only did I enjoy seeing old friends, colleagues, and former students, but I made new friends, and saw that people actually do care about the Bible, which I taught.

My first session was something new for Limmud—a class where knowledge of Hebrew was assumed, so we could look together at some of the Psalms traditionally recited on Friday night at synagogue, trying to figure out why there were chosen as Sabbath psalms.  Given that Hebrew knowledge was expected, I thought I would have a handful of participants—but I had many more, and together we puzzled through parts of Psalms 92 an 93.

Sunday was even more of a surprise—Limmud has many simultaneous sessions, and I was talking about “How the Bible Became the Bible” opposite Ruth Messinger, who was discussing social justice.  I would have gone to Ruth’s session!  I had people sitting on the floor, asking the best questions I had ever been asked after I finished my talk.   There certainly are demographic reasons to be worried about the American Jewish community.  But my experiences at Limmud and other adult Jewish education venues, and the interest in my books The Jewish Study Bible, How to Read the Bible, and How to Read the Jewish Bible, have made me much more optimistic about the Jewish future in America.  We may be decreasing numerically, but there is a solid and growing core who cares in a variety of serious ways about what it means to be Jewish, about who we are as Jews, and about continuing formal and informal Jewish education.  It is this group, who was well-represented at LimmudPhilly, who sit before my mind’s eye as I continue to write on Jewish topics.

Marc Brettler is Dora Golding Professor of Biblical Studies at Brandeis University.

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Follow our authors on tour!

The Sydney Taylor Book Award will be celebrating and showcasing its 2010 recipients with a blog tour February 1-5, 2010!

What is a blog tour, you ask? A blog tour is like a virtual book tour. So instead of going to a library or bookstore to see an author speak, you go to a website on or after the assigned date, and read the author’s interview in the comfort of your own home (or office!) Imagine that – being up close and personal with our winning authors without even leaving your chair!

JPS authors that will be a part of the blog tour are Judy Vida, author of Naomi’s Song (winner of the Sydney Taylor Honor Award in the teen readers category), and Ellen Frankel, author of the JPS Illustrated Children’s Bible (notable Sydney Taylor Book in the category of all ages). The interview with Juda Vida will be posted on The Book Nosher on February 3rd, 2010. The interview with Ellen Frankel will be posted on the Deo Writer on February 5th, 2010.

Make sure you tune in to see what our accomplished authors have to say!

-Emily

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Think You Know Everything About Judaism? Think Again!

Mara W. Cohen Ioannides, author of the JPS book A Shout in the Sunshine, guest blogs for JPS about the many forgotten cultures within Judaism.

Jews often forget that we are a multi-cultural community. American Jews, I believe, are particularly guilty of this, which is quite amazing considering the quilt of cultures we wrap ourselves in. We view American Jewishness as Yiddishkeit, and forget about the other ethnic groups that make up the community of Jews, like Yemini, Sephardi, etc. Before you pooh-pooh this idea, list Jewish ethnic food. Did you list: matzah balls, bagels, pastrami, rye bread, mandel brot, challah, or honey cake? Then you are an Eastern European ethnic Jew. What ever happened to humus, lahana, or halvah?

I grew up at a time when Sephardic Jews were only mentioned in history books (and I lived an hour from Mikveh Israel in the historic district of Philadelphia) and the only books for children about American Jewish children were the All of a Kind Family series. I loved those books, mostly because I imagined my grandmothers and their sisters as those girls. However, as I grew up I really wondered about all those other Jews. I wanted to know what Jews all over the world were like and there weren’t really books about them.

When I became a mother of a daughter with a Greek father, I desperately wanted her to know all of her history. I could find nothing for children about Greek Jewry. This began my series of novels. We know that Jews lived throughout history in almost every part of the world, but we don’t really understand what their lives were like. Here’s my pick of books for young and old that should get you started on seeing another part of Jewish culture:

1. I Remember Rhodes by Rebecca Amato Levy is a wonderful book of the author’s reminiscences about her childhood in the pre-Holocaust Jewish quarter of Rhodes. It is filled with celebrations, sayings, and songs. You can read it in English or Ladino! This woman was a foundation of the Rhodalisi community in California and started me on my interest in Greek Jewry.

2. Zayda Was a Cowboy by June Levitt Nislick, who would have thought? No, I’m serious. One of my grandfathers was a factory worker and the other, a postal worker, both lived in Brooklyn. Who had Jewish grandfathers who were cowboys? Never underestimate a children’s book. They may be short, but the story is just as good.

3. The Book of Jewish Food: An odyssey from Samarkand to New York by Claudia Roden was another inspiration for me. Anyone who has read my book knows there is an incredible amount of food in it. Every Jewish holiday is about food, even the fast days. My rabbi says that every time she reads my book she gets hungry. If you want to try making the food in my novel, get this book! This cookbook is amazing! The stories about the recipes are just as yummy as the recipes themselves.

4. The Life of Glückel of Hameln is a classic in women’s and Jewish studies. I love reading this memoir begun in 1690 by Glückel, a widow and mother of 14. Yes, I know, it is about an Eastern European Jew, but how many memoirs by women of this period are there? And how often do you get to read about life in the early 18th century. This book is part of the canon and should be on everyone shelves, just like Sydney Taylor’s books.

5. Rashi’s Daughters: Rachel, the third in Maggie Anton’s series, is another powerful look at cultural diversity. In this finale, Rachel’s husband lives in both France and Spain and there are few books where the comparison between the golden ages of the Sephardim and the Ashkenazim are so dynamically paralleled. I was especially intrigued by the internal conflicts of husband and wife over the question of polygamy, which was practiced by the Sephardim and not the Ashkenazi.

Have I reached my five? There are so many good books out there. I could write for days about the books I have sitting on my shelves and those I wish I did. Whatever you do, don’t forget to get yourselves some excellent CDs of music. Sephardic music is much sought after by scholars of medieval Spanish. Did you know that the language still spoken which is closest to medieval Spanish is Ladino? No? All the more reason to take the opportunity to discover the hidden sides of Jewish culture!

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Delayed E-Book Releases – Smart or Annoying?

No one can deny it. The e-book is here and it’s here to stay. Whether you’re for or against the e-reader doesn’t change the heart of the matter. The question now is how will the publishing industry adapt to the advent of such a new and exciting technology?

Many are concerned that as devices like Kindle, Nook, and the Sony Reader continue to take over the reading world, printed books will cease to exist. A very scary thought.

So, what is the publishing industry to do?

Well, if you’re Simon & Schuster, you’ve already thought of a solution. The question is, is it the right one? In an effort to address new technologies while continuing to sell printed materials, Simon & Schuster has decided to delay the sale of their publications’ e-books, only making them available four months after the initial hardcover release. And, they’re not the only ones, with companies like HarperCollins and Hachette Book Group following suit.

So, is this an ingenious plan or a childish antic?

Some believe that this makes sense. Wait a few months, let the printed version sell, and then release the e-book for those who desperately want it for their electronic devices. That way, everyone wins. As Simon & Schuster spokesman Adam Rothberg states,

We understand that there is an urge with digital media to have it more, faster, now. We’re trying to hit upon a happy medium.

But, some don’t agree. They argue that waiting to release an e-book version doesn’t cater to what the public wants most. Instead, these people believe that publishers are sticking to an antiquated system of scheduled releases (hardcover first, paperback second, etc) that doesn’t fit with the public’s desire. And, after all, aren’t the customers’ needs supposed to be priority #1?

Whether you agree with the publishers’ plan or not, be prepared to wait a little while for the e-book version of some of 2010’s exciting new releases. And remember, it’s not so bad. Reading print books is still an experience all its own!

-Sarah

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