Library
AJL-GCC
Review of New Adult Books
October 2006 – May 2007
Non-Fiction
Aly,
Gotz. Hitler’s Beneficiaries: Plunder, Racial War, and the Nazi Welfare
State. Metropolitan Books, 2007. Historian Aly’s important and
original contribution to Holocaust research posits that Hitler gained support
from the Germans by a systematic program of theft and redistribution of wealth.
Antler, Joyce. You Never
Call! You Never Write! A History of the Jewish Mother. Oxford
University Press, 2007. This comprehensive and scholarly study of the
stereotype of the Jewish mother in American popular culture is an amusing and
enlightening read.
Arendt, Hannah.
Reflections on Literature and Culture.
(Merieian Crossing Aesthetics) Ed. by
Susannah Young-Ah Gottlieb. Stanford University
Press, 2007. The 34 selections in this volume span 1930-1975, and offer great
insight into Arendt’s less notable works of cultural and literary criticism.
Bar-Zohar, Michael.
Shimon Peres: The Biography. Random House, 2007. Written with the
cooperation of the family and friends of the prime minister, Bar-Zohar, the
popular Knesset member and professor, has produced another excellent biography.
Includes source notes, index and
photos.
Baskind, Samantha.
Encyclopedia of Jewish American Artists. Greenwood Press, 2006.
Besides the excellent encyclopedic entry for each artist, the author includes a
useful treatment of the definition and history of American Jewish art.
The paucity of illustrations is disappointing.
Bernstein, Harry. The Invisible Wall: A Love Story That Broke
Barriers. Ballantine Books, 2007. Written at age 93, this memoir
is set in pre World War I England, where the author’s working-class neighborhood
was divided by an invisible line between the Jewish side and the Christian
side. The Jews and gentiles shared little in common, expect for poverty,
fervent religious belief, and prejudice.
Biro, Adam. One Must Also
Be Hungarian. Translated by Catherine Tihanyi. University of Chicago
Press, 2007. Written by a Hungarian-born French author and publisher, this slim
elegiac volume reflects on the 200-year history and the memorable characters of
a Hungarian-Jewish family.
Blumberg, Ilana. Houses
of Study: A Jewish Woman among Books. University of Nebraska Press,
2007. This well-written feminist memoir is an intimate spiritual portrait of a
young woman attracted to both Talmud study and secular literature and the
limitations imposed by her position as an Orthodox woman.
Boteach, Shmuley. Shalom
in the Home: Smart Advice for a Peaceful Home. Meredith, 2007.
Influenced by his own experience as a child of divorce, the host of the
television series “Shalom in the Home” gets to the heart of family dynamics and
individual personalities to help families build deeper, more loving
relationships.
Buhle, Paul, ed. Jews and
American Popular Culture. (Praeger Perspectives) Praeger, 2007.
This handsome three-volume reference set presents a scholarly, yet
accessible, survey of the history of Jewish involvement in American pop culture.
Chafets, Zev. A Match Made
In Heaven: American Jews, Christian Zionists, and One Man's
Exploration of the Weird and Wonderful Judeo-Evangelical Alliance.
HarperCollins, 2007. A
journalist with impressive career credentials, Chafets travels across America to
explore the unlikely and uneasy alliance between Jews and evangelical
Christians.
Comins, Mike. A Wild
Faith: Jewish Ways into the Wilderness,
Wilderness Ways into Judaism.
Jewish Lights, 2007. Rabbi Comins offers readers a way to deepen their Jewish
spirituality by connecting with the natural world.
Dan, Uri. Ariel
Sharon: An Intimate Portrait.
Palgrave Macmillan, 2006. Writing as Sharon’s supporter and confidante
of 50 years, journalist Dan mined his notes and diaries to produce this very
personal book, enriched by transcriptions of conversations and detailed reports
of the many significant military, political, and legal battles in Sharon’s
career. Includes a chronology, index and photos, but no bibliography.
Dennis, Geoffrey W. The
Encyclopedia of Jewish Myth, Magic & Mysticism. Llewellyn, 2007. This
comprehensive compendium covers over 1,000 terms that are associated with Jewish
mysticism and spirituality.
Diamant, Anita. Living a
Jewish Life: Jewish Traditions, Customs, and Values for Today’s Families:
Updated and Revised Edition. Collins, 2007. Diamant’s classic guide to
the cultural and spiritual treasures of Judaism has been completely updated and
revised.
Elkins, Dov Peretz. The
Wisdom of Judaism: An Introduction to the Values of the Talmud. Jewish
Lights, 2007. Rabbi Elkins adds his commentary to the commentaries, and focuses
on the Talmud’s teachings for ethical human behavior.
Finkelstein, Norman H.
American Jewish History: A JPS Guide. Jewish Publication Society,
2007. Written for the layperson, this engaging history book covers
American Jewish history from the discovery of America through the end of the 20th
century. The smooth-flowing text and the many photos and supplementary
information about people, documents, and events add a personal touch that brings
American Jewish history to life.
Fishbein, Susie. Kosher
by Design Short on Time: Fabulous Food Faster. Mesorah Publications,
2006. The newest entry (or is it entrée?) in the Kosher by Design series offers
recipes that are sure to be a hit with busy families.
Fishman, Sylvia Barack.
The Way Into the Varieties of Jewishness. Jewish Lights, 2007. The
latest title in The Way Into series of accessible guidebooks to Judaism presents
an introduction to the many ways Jews understand Jewishness and identify
themselves and their communities throughout history and today.
Franks, Lucinda. My Father's Secret War: A Memoir.
Miramax, 2007. As her elderly
father slips into dementia, Pulitzer Prize-winning author Lucinda Franks
discovers a long hidden part of his life. He reveals that during WW II, he was
a spy for the Navy's Bureau of Ordnance and, disguised as an SS officer,
he risked his life behind enemy lines.
Friedman, Cary A. Wisdom
From the Batcave: How to Live a Super, Heroic Life. Compass Books,
2006. Rabbi Friedman focuses on relationships with self, others, and the larger
community, while drawing inspiration from Batman in this entertaining and
insightful book.
Gold, Dore. The Fight for
Jerusalem: Radical Islam, the
West, and the Future of the Holy City.
Regnery Publishing, 2007. Authored by the former Israeli
ambassador to the UN, this book is a thoroughly researched, historically
accurate account of the history and politics of Jerusalem, but a very strident
diatribe against the dangers of Palestinian control over any piece of Jerusalem
or its suburbs.
Gruber, Ruth. Witness: One of the Great
Correspondents of the Twentieth Century Tells Her Story. NY:
Schocken, 2007. Ninety-five year old Ruth Gruber can still tell a great story
and this time it is the story of her adventures becoming a journalist and
reporting the great events in the life of the Jewish people in the 20th century.
Accompanied by moving photographs, all taken by the author.
Hefez, Nir, and Gadi Bloom. Ariel Sharon: A Life.
Translated by Mitch Ginsburg. Random House, 2006. Written by two newspaper
editors/ journalists, this is a very readable, objective biography. Includes a
bibliography and photos, but no index.
Isaacson, Walter.
Einstein: His Life and Universe. Simon & Schuster, 2007. Acclaimed
biographer Isaacson examines the remarkable life of the famous scientist in this
lucid account.
Jacobs, Meredith L. The
Modern Jewish Mom’s Guide to Shabbat: Connect and Celebrate - Bring Your Family
Together with the Friday Night Meal. Harper, 2007. The author, founder
of the popular web site ModernJewishMom.com, gives readers a must-have guidebook
to Shabbat in today’s hectic world.
Kaplan, Beth. Finding the Jewish Shakespeare: The Life and Legacy of
Jacob Gordin. Syracuse University Press,
2007. Beth Kaplan explores the contributions of her
great-grandfather Jacob Gordin, reformer and playwright, during the Golden Age
of Yiddish Theater from 1891-1910.
Morinis, Alan. Everyday Holiness: The Jewish Spiritual Path of Mussar.
Trumpeter, 2007. The Jewish spiritual tradition of Mussar, a set of teachings
designed to cultivate personal growth, is explained in this new book, as well as
one by Ira F. Stone (see below).
Newhouse, Alana, Ed. A
Living Lens: Photographs of Jewish Life from the Pages of Forward. W.W.
Norton, 2007. This extraordinary volume features classic photographs of
Lower East Side pushcarts, Yiddish theater, labor rallies, and other gems
published in the Forward.
Noiville, Florence. Isaac
B. Singer: A Life. Translated by Catherine Temerson. Farrar, Strauss,
Giroux, 2006. A brief well written “warts and all” biography of the Nobel
laureate.
Ochs, Vanessa. Inventing
Jewish Ritual: New American Traditions. Jewish Publication Society,
2007. Vanessa Ochs invites her readers to explore how Jewish practice
can be more meaningful through renewing, reshaping, and even creating new
rituals, such as blessings for newborn daughters, Miriam's cup, becoming an
elder, and more.
Parrish, Timothy. The
Cambridge Companion to Philip Roth.
Cambridge University Press, 2007. The Cambridge companion series always
provides in-depth analysis, and this fascinating collection of essays offers a
thorough introduction to Roth’s oeuvre and critical analyses of his books
and themes.
Piercy, Marge. Pesach for the Rest of Us: Making
the Passover Seder Your Own. Schocken Books, 2007. Prolific novelist
and poet Piercy gives readers a personal guidebook to the holiday, complete with
poems, blessings, and recipes.
Schorsch, Ismar. Canon
without Closure: Torah Commentaries. Aviv Press, 2007. Each commentary
in this landmark collection by an influential leader and scholar draws upon the
author's wide breadth of Jewish scholarship, Talmudic teachings, and
inspirational personal insights.
Stanislawski, Michael. A
Murder in Lemberg: The Assassination of Reform Rabbi Abraham Kohn.
Princeton University Press, 2006. In relating the details of the 1848
murder of a reformist rabbi by a fellow Jew, the author provides a well-written
suspense story and also relates the convoluted history of conflicts within and
around the Jewish community of the Hapsburg Empire.
Stone, Ira F. A Responsible Life: The Spiritual Life
of Mussar. Aviv Press, 2007. Stone’s book is another new offering on
the topic of personal growth and spiritual responsibility.
Van Voolen, Edward. My
Grandparents, My Parents, and I: Jewish Art and Culture. Prestel,
2006. A beautifully illustrated book that illuminates the role Jews have played
in the visual arts over the last 2000 years.
Wilson, Jonathan. Marc
Chagall. (Jewish Encounters) Schocken, 2007. Novelist Wilson
illuminates the mysteries of Chagall’s works in a fresh and lively way.
Fiction
Andrzejewski, Jerzy. Holy
Week: A Novel of the Warsaw
Ghetto Uprising. (Polish and
Polish-American Studies) Ohio University Press, 2007. First published in 1945,
Andrzejewski’s novel dramatically portrays the abandonment of the Jews to Nazi
persecution by the dominant Polish society in Warsaw.
Appelfeld, Aharon. All
Whom I Have Loved. Translated by Aloma Halter. Schocken Books, 2007.
Appelfeld’s newest novel to be translated into English tells the haunting story
of nine-year-old Paul Rosenfeld and his family in Eastern Europe in the 1930’s.
Begley, Louis. Matters of Honor. Knopf,
2007. In the 1950’s, three Harvard roommates struggle with loyalty, integrity,
and status pressures in school and in the ensuing years. One of the roommates,
Henry, is a Polish refugee who survived World War II in hiding and continues to
battle antisemitism at every turn.
Chabon, Michael. The
Yiddish Policemen’s Union. HarperCollins, 2007. What if Sitka
Alaska became a Jewish homeland, and not the British Mandate in Palestine? It is
now six decades later, and Sitka, which has grown prosperous under the Yiddish
speaking Jews, is reverting back to Alaska. Meanwhile, homicide detective Meyer
Landsman is busy trying to solve the murder of his chess-playing neighbor.
Danford, Natalie. Inheritance. St.
Martin's Press, 2007. A daughter learns her father's secrets when she travels
to his hometown in Italy after his death. This engaging first novel takes
readers from present-day America to Italy during World War II.
Elon, Emuna. If You Awaken Love. Toby
Press, 2007. A Tel Aviv interior designer specializing in closed rooms and
clients' privacy, 40-year-old Shlomtzion Drore has closed herself off
emotionally after her childhood sweetheart, Yair, broke off their engagement
when his rabbi refused them his blessing. Years later she is forced to confront
her old flame and examine her own secular leftist politics.
Englander, Nathan. The
Ministry of Special Cases. Knopf, 2007. In his first book since
the short story collection, For the Relief of Unbearable Urges, Englander
explores the erasure of identity among a Jewish family who lives in Buenos Aires
in 1976, the time of the country’s “dirty war,” when suspected political
subversives were kidnapped by the Argentine security forces and “disappeared.”
Englander’s dark themes demand readers’ close attention.
Etzioni-Halevy, Eva. The
Garden of Ruth.
Plume, 2007. Etzioni-Halevy’s imaginative second novel focuses on the biblical
story of Ruth.
Frank, Glenn. Abe
Gilman’s Ending. Beaufort Books, 2006. After the death of his beloved
wife and a fall that leaves him wheelchair-bound, Abe Gilman thinks dying would
be better than living out his days in a nursing home. Interwoven with Abe’s
story is the story of Elie, a Jewish boy in 1948 who is determined to find out
what happened to his father, a German Jew who remained in Europe after sending
his family to safety.
Gregory, Jill, and Karen Tintori.
The Book of Names. St. Martin’s /Griffin, 2007. Gregory and
Tintori’s first collaborative novel uses the Jewish tradition of the Lamed-Vovniks
as the driving force behind a plot that is reminiscent of The DaVinci Code.
Isaacs, Susan. Past
Perfect. Scribner, 2007. Popular novelist Isaacs’ 11th
novel has former CIA analyst Katie Schottland using her expertise to solve the
mysterious disappearance of a colleague and the murders of two East German
asylum seekers.
Jacobson, Howard. Kalooki Nights.
Simon & Schuster, 2007. Booklist
awarded a starred review to British comic author Jacobson’s ninth novel, in
which cartoonist Max Glickman ruminates on his Jewishness.
Jenoff, Pam. The
Kommandant’s Girl. Mira, 2007. Emma Blau, a young librarian, escapes
Krakow’s Jewish ghetto with false papers provided by her activist husband who
has left to join the Jewish resistance. She winds up working for a German
general, and the consequences that ensue test her new marriage.
Judah, Sophie. Dropped
from Heaven: Stories. Schocken, 2007. This debut collection of stories
illuminates the little known community of Bene Israel in India.
Levi, Primo. A Tranquil
Star: Unpublished Stories. Translated by Ann Goldstein and Alessandra
Bastagli. W.W. Norton, 2007. This first new American collection of fiction by
Italian chemist and Holocaust survivor gathers seventeen stories previously
published in Italian between 1949 and 1986.
Lowenthal, Michael.
Charity Girl. Houghton Mifflin, 2007. The Committee on Prevention of
Social Evils Surrounding Military Camps imprisons Frieda Mintz, a 17-year-old
Jewish shopgirl from Boston, when her first encounter with a soldier turns from
idealistic love into a nightmare of bureaucracy and medical mistreatment during
World War I.
Mekler, Eva. The Polish
Woman. Bridge Works Publishing, 2007. Set in 1967 Manhattan,
29-year old Karolina Staszek suddenly appears in Jewish attorney Philip Landau's
office, claiming to be his long-lost cousin who was hidden by a Catholic family
in Lublin, Poland during the Holocaust. In this suspenseful novel, Philip must
decipher if Karolina is a shrewd con artist or his real cousin who survived the
Holocaust.
Nassib, Selim. The Palestinian Lover.
Translated by Alison Anderson. Europa Editions, 2007. Originally published in
French, this sharply observed novel tells the love story between a young Golda
Meir and the son of a rich Palestinian family.
Rakoff, Alvin. Baldwin Street.
Bunim & Bannigan,
2007. Rakoff’s novel is set in
Toronto during the Depression, with a cast of characters who are members of the
tight-knit Jewish immigrant community.
Reich, Tova. My
Holocaust. HarperCollins, 2007. A scathing satire on the
trivialization of the Holocaust, Reich’s novel will infuriate more than a few
groups of aspiring victims. It is at once hilarious and deeply serious, from
its depiction of enterprising survivors who inflate their war-time experiences
to wannabes representing the poultry holocaust, the fur holocaust, the menstrual
holocaust, and a parade of others all looking for a piece of the action.
Rosenbaum, Lisa Pearl. A
Day of Small Beginnings. Little, Brown and Company, 2006. A Polish
American family searching for its roots uncovers a gripping drama that involves
a ghost, antisemitism, love, and the small town in
Poland that is both
their curse and redemption.
Segal, Lore. Shakespeare’s Kitchen:
Stories. New Press, 2007. Wonderfully realized linked stories
that center on Ilka Weisz, from the author’s classic novel Her First
American, and her relationship with the dysfunctional family that is formed
by her intellectual co-workers at the Concordance think tank.
Shomer, Enid. Tourist
Season: Stories. Random House, 2007. A collection of short
stories about women charting unfamiliar territory, whether in Brooklyn or the
Cayman trench. In one, a Jewish woman travels to Tibet where she accepts, with
hesitation, her birthright as the reincarnation of a saint. In another, a
Radcliffe student, home for the summer, is attracted to her cousin.
Sonenberg, Maya. Voices from the Blue Hotel.
Chiasmus, 2007. The second collection of short stories by the winner of the
1989 Drue Heinz Literature Prize.
Ulinich, Anya.
Petropolis.
Viking, 2007. Sasha Goldberg, a bi-racial Jewish teenager living in Asbestos 2,
escapes her dying Siberian town and her overbearing mother to search for her
father in America. In her debut novel, Ulinich weaves an engaging story with a
thoroughly captivating protagonist.
Yahia, Mona. When the
Grey Beetles Took Over Baghdad.
Braziler, 2007. Winner of the Jewish Quarterly-Wingate Prize for
Fiction, this vivid and personal story of growing up Jewish in Baghdad is set
against the backdrop of political upheaval and an increasingly fractured
society.
Yizhar, S. Preliminaries.
Translated by Nicholas de Lange. Toby Press, 2007. Written in 1991 but
recently translated into English, this autobiographical novel of a young boy
growing up in Palestine in the 20s and 30s marked the final flowering of the
great novelist’s oeuvre.
Coming in August 2007:
Kellerman,
Faye. The Burnt House. William Morrow, 2007.
Ragen, Naomi. The
Saturday Wife. St. Martin’s Press, 2007.
Compiled by
Wendy Wasman, The Temple – Tifereth Israel
Lee Haas, Temple Emanu El
Merrily Hart, Aaron Garber Library, Siegal
College
Nina Rosner, Beachwood Branch, Cuyahoga County
Public Library
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