Jewish Book Carnival discussion
What are you reading?

All Other Nights - Dara Horne
The Book Thief - Marcus Zusak
The Covenant - Naomi Regan
The Ghost of Hannah Mendes - Naomi Regan
Keeping Faith - Jodi Picoult
Sara's Key - Tatiana Rosnay
The Late Lamented Molly Marks - Sally Koslow
Our next book is Snow in August by Pete Hamell
I am personally reading Wapasha and the Rabbi by Dr Howard S. Shelden. It is a most interesting and thought provoking. I think this book would be a great book club discussion.
I have taken some of the suggestions from this forum to suggest to my group
I would love more suggestions for my group. I would also like to connect with other Jewish book clubs


The Warsaw Anagrams by Richard Zimler
Anya's War by Andrea Alban
The Envoy by Alex Kershaw
The Defining Decade by Harold Troper
48 Hours of Kristallnacht by Mitchell Bard
The Long Walk by Ruth Treeson
My Three Lives by Philip Markowicz
Gretel's Story by Gretel Wachtel and Claudia Strachan
I am currently reading The Auslander by Paul Dowswell. That review will be posted in a week or two.
You can read all of these reviews and more here: http://www.nyjournalofbooks.com/revie...
Charles Weinblatt
Author, Jacob's Courage
http://jacobscourage.wordpress.com

For "Mail Order Bride," do you mean Anna Solomon's "The Little Bride"? I've read it, and I'm happy to be hosting an interview with the author next month in my newsletter.


Thanks, Susan. The newsletter is posted at http://www.erikadreifus.com/newsletter/current and the September issue should be up at the end of August.



Charles, the writing was wonderful, but I found that the story dragged a bit. I enjoyed the parts about chemistry the most. You can tell that the author was really fired up when discussing his field (chemistry). But the autobiographical parts about life in the village and at university were just not that engaging.
I've read several books lately where the line-by-line writing is first class, but the storytelling is flabby. I hate to say it about any book by Primo Levi, but The Periodic Table falls into this class.

Disappointed to hear this, as I've had this upstairs on a shelf waiting to be read when the time is right...

I was disappointed as well, really. I was reading the book concurrently with a university course on Judea and Rome and it was just "okay, another self-evident page..."


This powerful treatise explores with exquisite detail the pernicious foundations of bigotry against Jews, from ancient times through the dark ages, the enlightenment and into contemporary examples. A Convenient Hatred illustrates the magnitude of anti-Jewish vitriol, loathing and detestation over the ages, leading to a unique and mendacious version of history that blames Jews for impossibly disparate and disconnected events and catastrophes.
Ms. Goldstein has produced a masterful exposition on the vulnerability of Jews throughout history, highlighting how malicious pagan and Christian leaders exploited the Jewish people. She also addresses the unending value of education within Jewish culture, a trait that has served them well for dozens of centuries.
"A Convenient Hatred" is a profoundly authoritative resource for educators. Its examples, stories, references, maps, pictures, and illustrations bring the history of the Jews to life in a powerful way not experienced since James Michener’s The Source, a work of fiction. With impeccable references and well-researched examples, Ms. Goldstein has created a tour de force.
Read my entire review at The New York Journal of Books: http://www.nyjournalofbooks.com/revie...
Charles S. Weinblatt
Author, Jacob's Courage
http://jacobscourage.wordpress.com





Let's move away from your concept of "fat Jewish women." Frankly, you have no empirical evidence that Jewish women are more obese (pregnant or not) than any other women. You could not base such a strange postulation on racial or genetic predisposition. After all, Judaism is a religion, which one can join or leave at will; it's not a race in which one has predestined genetic characteristics. Nazis played the “race” card and they were proven wrong. So, maybe we should put an end to this unproven concept of “fat Jewish women” and focus on Jewish literature.


More recently, The Jewish Journal published my review of THE HOUSE AT TYNEFORD, the second novel by British author Natasha Solomons. You'll fine that one at http://www.jewishjournal.com/books/article/a_jewish_housemaid_in_england_at_wartime_20120223/.

So there I am reading the 'engaging' story, and it is really only a story for someone reading it because it all happened generations ago, when suddenly I read how Mark found the journal. At first he went to a London library, but that didn't yield the journal. It was a mistake. So he started searching for it on the internet, and lo and behold, he finds it in a little book shop in Jerusalem that makes a point of buying and selling all sorts of antique, eccentric stuff, the older the better.
And that was when I felt linked to the book, a kind of a personal click, because the owner of that book shop was a friend and neighbor, Rabbi Jacob Shemarya. Jacob was originally from LA, and later was a comminuty rabbi in England. When he came to Israel - where there is no lack of rabbis - he opened an antique book shop. Jacob sent Mark the journal for $85, and the Treblinka horrific chronicles found new life with Mark weaving it's story, explaining who Hershl was.
Jacob Shemarya died a short time afterwards. Apparently he suffered from a congenital heart disease. I am sure he did many good deeds in his life, but I am also quite certain that he did not dream that he would one day be a vital link in the commemoration of the Holocaust.
One of our mitzvot is to remember what Amalek did to us, that in every generation there is a new Haman who rises to wipe us out. Jacob Shemarya and Mark have done just that.
Interesting how a forgotten journal comes to life, after decades, like it was lying on a dusty shelf just waiting for it's moment to spring back into life.

Wow. Fantastic story behind the story. Thanks so much for sharing this.

So far, I am enjoying the story. Anyone else read this one or hear of it?

Meantime, have recently read and reviewed WHAT WE TALK ABOUT WHEN WE TALK ABOUT ANNE FRANK, Nathan Englander's latest story collection.



Hi Rod,
Thanks very much for your message and apologies for taking so long to get back to you. Yes, that is an extraordinary coincidence! Without Rabbi Jacob Shmarya, my book would never have been started. let alone written, because Hershl's own words were utterly central to the writing process and that shop in Jerusalem was the only place that had it. I am sorry to hear he passed away.
Best wishes, as always,
Mark

I really don't mind. Bye.




I read "I am Forbidden" a good book. Have not read "Unorthodox" no desire to, have read "Unchosen" really that is all I need to read on that subject. People leave their faith, realign their faith, change faith, nothing new under the sun.

I loved this book. I believe there was a situation that happened in this book that not once was mentioned by name. Did anyone notice this?

I've got a galley of that one, too, and I'm eager to read it, especially after reading Adam Kirsch's review in Tablet a few days ago.
Meantime, I've posted a few thoughts on My Machberet about a new ebook, The Liberal Case for Israel: Debunking Eight Crazy Lies About the Jewish State.
And the new Josh Henkin novel may have to wait until I've read Francesca Segal's The Innocents. I managed to get a signed galley at Book Expo America this week, and I was able to chat briefly with the author at a local bookstore event, too. I've been anticipating this book for awhile, so it's likely going to the top of the TBR pile.





Ditto, Elli. I'd like to know what you thought, too.
Here's what I wrote elsewhere on Goodreads:
"Read complimentary advance edition provided via NetGalley. For most of the book I was captivated--which is not to say that the various episodes and details didn't evoke some unpleasant feelings. But as difficult as some of the material is, I was able to accept/process it. But I'm still trying to figure out one section, near the end, that involves all three main characters. Read it twice, but still can't wrap my head around it. Will appreciate the chance to read others' views/discuss."
I'm also wondering if it's really a book of linked stories rather than a novel. I know that novels typically "sell" better than stories, but going into this book expecting a novel and finding what really seemed to me to be linked stories required some mental recalibrations ("reading as a writer," anyway). What did you think?
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Link: http://www.nyjournalofbooks.com/revie...