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Set in 1930s and 1940s Johannesburg, South Africa, Jewish-Canadian writer Kenneth Bonert's debut novel The Lion Seeker is a bildungsroman, immigration story, and family saga rolled into a page turner. In my New York Journal of Books review I refer to the book as a promising debut. To hear an interview with Mr. Bonert go to my examiner article.

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Muki Tzur speaking tour poster

On each of the first three days of the coming week there will be a talk by guest speakers on Jewish topics in East Midwood and Park Slope: Brooklyn: Three Jewish talks this week - New York NY | Examiner.com

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The Golem and the Jinni book cover

“The Golem and the Jinni is recommended to adults who enjoy a good story and have a childlike sense of make-believe.”

My review of The Golem and the Jinni | New York Journal of Books. Also see additional remarks in my examiner.com article:

People of all ages enjoy fairytales and the folk tales. Helene Wecker's debut novel The Golem and the Jinni, published today by New York publisher HarperCollins, combines several fiction genres in a work that feels like a fairytale. In my New York Journal of books review of the novel I describe the book as "a fairy tale for grown ups that combines historical fiction and paranormal fantasy in a novel of ideas that is also a tearful love story and a suspenseful page-turner."


Helene Wecker, author of The Golem and the Jinni
Cozy Little Book Journal


The folklore underlying the book is both Eastern European Jewish and Levantine Arab in origin. Jewish folk tales are fun reads, but in most of them you won't learn much about Judaism. The same is true of this novel. In interviews Ms. Wecker has admitted that her knowledge of Judaism is by and large limited to what she learned as a child in Hebrew school.

The first of the two title characters is created by a corrupt kabbalist. Here Ms. Wecker is taking poetic license. Traditional Judaism has its share of magic and superstition, but the magic is supposed to be white magic. In theory a corrupt kabbalist would be an ineffective one, since the efficacy of the magic depends on the purity of the practitioner's intent as well as on his or her strict ritual observance, but from a Jungian perspective we all have a shadow side to our psyches, and anyway, this is a book whose premise demands multiple suspensions of disbelief.

As in most love stories boy meets girl, they get to know each other noting similarities and differences, they break up, and a dramatic crisis reminds them of their feelings for each other and brings them back together. To find out how that basic scenario plays out in detail for the novel's supernatural title characters you'll have to read the book.

In addition to the title characters the book has a strong cast of supporting characters including the title characters' human mentors, protectors, and co-workers, and people in Eastern Europe and the Levant who figure in the backstories prior to the title characters' immigration to late 19th Century New York.

Ms. Wecker wrote The Golem and the Jinni as an attempt to combine the folklores of her Jewish ancestors and of her Arab-American husband's ancestors and to imagine a time and place where Jews and Arabs lived in peace as neighbors. But the historical reality in turn of the previous century New York was that the Jewish immigrants of the Lower East Side and the Arab immigrants of the Lower West Side rarely crossed paths. It is also worth noting that turn of the previous century Levantine Jewish immigrants chose to live among their European co-religionists on the Lower East Side rather than among their former neighbors from the old country in Little Syria.

In my New York Journal of Books review I recommend The Golem and the Jinni "to adults who enjoy a good story and have a childlike sense of make-believe." This novel would make a terrific HBO original series combining the supernatural elements of True Blood and Game of Thrones with the historical authenticity of Boardwalk Empire, Deadwood, John Adams,and Rome.


Helene Wecker, author of The Golem and the Jinni
Helene Wecker, author of The Golem and the Jinni
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The Jewish Book Council's 2012 book of the year is not one book but three: the three volume box set City of Promises: A History of the Jews of New York published last September by New York University Press.

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The Prophet of Tenth Street book cover
SUNY Press

In the past year I published 14 book reviews on New York Journal of Books and synopses of those reviews with additional remarks here on examiner.com. I also wrote a review of a friend's novel that NYJB's ethics rules preclude me from publishing there and which I have been submitting to other literary publications for several months (which makes me appreciate having a regular venue for my reviews as a NYJB reviewer); I could have published it here, but the book in question,The Prophet of Tenth Street by Tsipi Keller, deserves to be reviewed in a less newsy, more literary and intellectually weighty publication, so for now I will continue sending it out.



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The Western Wall and Temple Mount
The Western Wall and Temple Mount

I enthusiastically recommend Brown University Judaic Studies professor Michael Satlow's series of 23 half hour long free podcasts "From Israelite to Jew," a secular academic college level history of the Second Temple period on iTunes.

Although New York offers a cornucopia of Jewish adult education programs some people who would be interested in ongoing learning cannot commit to showing up at a particular place at at specified time, while others find the fees prohibitively expensive. To them I enthusiastically recommend Brown University Judaic Studies professor Michael Satlow's series of 23 half hour long free podcasts "From Israelite to Jew" on iTunes. Professor Satlow earned his Ph.D. in Ancient Judaism at New York's Jewish Theological Seminary.

"From Israelite to Jew" is a secular academic college level history of the Second Temple period, though it starts with a brief survey of earlier Jewish history with particular attention to the final decades of the First Temple. I have a decent knowledge of Judaic studies, and the first four episodes did not tell me anything I didn't already know, but starting with the Persian period things get interesting.

Professor Satlow considers Ezra and Nehmiah complete failures who did not accomplish what they set out to achieve. Their prohibition of intermarriage between returning exiles and the native Judaeans who remained in Judah during the exile was largely ignored outside of a small elite in Jerusalem.

Also interesting is the continuation of Jewish polytheism in the Persian period. I had previously thought that the reforms initiated by King Josiah thirty years before the exile developed into the adoption of monotheism during the exile. But correspondence from the Jewish community in Egypt during the Persian period shows that polytheism persisted.

Jewish mercenaries in the Persian army stationed on Elephantine Island in the Nile River built their own Temple which the resentful native Egyptians destroyed during a rebellion. In letters the Elephantine Jews complain that they can no longer offer sacrifices not only to Yahweh but also to other deities.

In the Hellenistic period Professor Satlow teaches us that the Maccabean rebellion had as much to do with power struggles among rival priestly families as it did resistance to a Seleucid policy of compulsory assimilation. Professor Satlow's discussion of the Hasmonean and Roman periods is equally fascinating.

Give yourself an early free Hanukkah present and download and listen to "From Israelite to Jew." If you would like to compensate Professor Satlow he has a paypal "Donate" button on his blog and welcomes voluntary contributions.

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Williamsburg, Brooklyn resident and Chicago native Jami Attenberg's third novel, The Middlesteins, published yesterday by Grand Central Publishing, explores how one woman's morbid obesity affects her Jewish-American family and its dynamics. Unfortunately the writing is inconsistent; in my New York Journal of Books review of the book I wrote, "the quality of its prose … is at best serviceable and at worst pedestrian…" Also read my NYJB review: http://www.nyjournalofbooks.com/review/middlesteins


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Ambassador Oren's will be the first of three talks in the next thirty days in Brooklyn synagogues about Israel by knowledgable speakers.

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"The Canvas has a unique structure: half way through the book the first of its two narratives ends, and to continue reading readers must turn the book upside down and start again at the other end. The book has two front covers, and readers can start with either one." Also see my review on New York Journal of Books: http://www.nyjournalofbooks.com/review/canvas






The Canvas book cover
New York Journal of Books


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"Learn the entire process of creating a Kosher Shofar from the cooking to the final polishing (sorry we will not be hunting live rams)."

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Istanbul Was a Fairy Tale by Mario Levi book cover

Jewish Literature: Mario Levi's "Istanbul Was a Fairy Tale" - New York NY | Examiner.com.

An addendum to my NYJB book review which appears here: http://goo.gl/zAhFa






Istanbul Was a Fairy Tale book cover
New York Journal of Booksw


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A language epidemic erupts among Jewish families; children's speech makes their parents deathly ill. Soon it spreads to the rest of the population. This dark fantasy is the premise of Jewish New Yorker Ben Marcus's new novel, The Flame Alphabet published today by Knopf. In my New York Journal of Books review I write,




The Flame Alphabet book cover
New York Journal of Books


“Ben Marcus was already known as a daring, experimental writer’s writer on the strength of his three previous books of fiction. The good news for the general reading public is that his fourth book, The Flame Alphabet, is his most accessible to date, and its comparative clarity and linearity in no way diminishes its power, inventiveness, and originality. The quality of the writing also compensates for the book’s thin character development. Instead, Mr. Marcus deploys his potent prose to tell a tale about a world in which all language becomes lethal.”

One of Mr. Marcus' inventions is a new form of Judaism in which couples worship in forest hideouts on Thursdays instead of Friday nights and Saturdays. Like the epidemic itself, this aspect of the novel requires a suspesion of disbelief. The ominous nature of the fictional events lends the narrative a sense of gravitas that Mr. Marcus' prose style is well equiped to express. While the book has all the necessary elements to make it a cult classic, a book this well written deserves the widest possible audience.

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Paper Conspiracies book cover
Paper Conspiracies book cover
New York Journal of Books

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Thelittlebridebookcover

In my New York Journal of Books review I describe the book as  “. . . a plot-driven novel conveyed in crisp, descriptive, and thought-provoking prose via an engagingly intelligent third-person narrator. . . . an auspicious debut” and recommend it to both adult and precocious young adult readers.  via the late examiner.com

Former NPR correspondant Anna Solomon's debut novel, The Little Bride, is published today by Riverhead Books, a division of New York publisher Penguin USA. In my New York Journal of Books review I describe the book as “. . . a plot-driven novel conveyed in crisp, descriptive, and thought-provoking prose via an engagingly intelligent third-person narrator. . . . an auspicious debut” and recommend it to both adult and precocious young adult readers.

The title character is a late Nineteenth Century Russian-Jewish teenager who immigrates to this country as a mail-order bride and joins her new husband as a pioneer homesteader on the Great Plains. Ms. Solomon based the story on the memoirs of at least two Nineteenth Century Jewish women pioneers in the American west, but the plot and characters are the product of her imagination.





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Whattheysavedbookcover

What happens when a New York Jewish pack-rat daughter inherits her New York Jewish pack-rat father's belongings? She embarks on a Jewish genealogical search for her and her dad's long lost relatives. Nancy K. Miller's What They Saved: Pieces of a Jewish Past, published today by University of Nebraska Press, is the story of that search, a story that focuses more on the process of the search than on its results. In my New York Journal of Books review I quote Ms. Miller, “Every new piece of information keeps me on the road to the ever-expanding possibility of the quest, a quest that in the end will still yield only partial knowledge—and will never give me, return to me, those past lives.” Ms. Miller, a retired CUNY Graduate Center English and Comparative Literature professor, is an appealing prose stylist, but because of its focus on the genalogical search process this book will mostly appeal to genealogy buffs in general and Jewish genealogy buffs in particular.

For more info: David Cooper

This article first appeared on the late Examiner.com

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Vaclavandlenacover

Today New York publisher The Dial Press, a division of Random House, releases Haley Tanner's debut novel Vaclav and Lena, a coming of age tale about Russian-Jewish immigrant children in Brooklyn. In my New York Journal of Books review I describe the book as "a tale of unconditional love; of attachment, separation, and reunion; and of trauma and healing." It's an engaging read that will appeal to teens, their parents, and anyone interested in the immigrant experience.

Ms. Tanner is a Brooklyn resident who got the idea for the story when she was a tutor whose students were Russian immigrant children not unlike the novel's title characters. For a view of more affluent, better educated suburban Russian-Jewish immigrants try The Cosmopolitans by Nadia Kalman.

For more info: David Cooper

via the late examiner.com

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Melandmiriamalexenberg1

Today is Yom Ha’atzmaut, Israel’s Independence Day, and I’d like to mark the day by sharing an oral-history from The Jewish-American Marriage Oral History Project of a couple of Jewish New Yorkers and artists who throughout their half-century marriage have alternated their residence between Israel and the United States. I interviewed Petach Tikvah, Israel residents Mel and Miriam Alexenberg a year and ten months ago at a restaurant overlooking Rockefeller Center during one of their visits to the city where they met and married.

As in my interviews with Fred Terna and Rebecca Shiffman, Gary and Judy Simon, Mindi Wernick and Malkie Grozalsky, Keith and Cindy Hamada, and Nadav Avital and Buffie Marie Longmire Avital, to make the interview read like a dialogue I have edited out my questions; for clarity the interview subjects sometimes rephrase a question as a statement, and where this occurs it indicates a change of subject. I began the interview by asking how they met.

Read the entire interview on jewishamericanmarriage.com

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