Book Reviews

Celebrating Jewish Literature: Deciding the children’s fates

By Rabbi Rachel Esserman

It’s not unusual for novels to focus on a similar topic. In fact, this happens a great deal with those about World War II and its aftermath. The latest trend is works that look at the effect the war had on hidden children, those separated from their parents and pr…

Celebrating Jewish Literature: The priestly version of the Bible

By Rabbi Rachel Esserman

Since the 18th century, scholars have debated the origin of the Bible, generally dividing it into four source documents written or compiled by the Yahwist, the Elohist, the Priestly writers and the Deuteronomist. Numerous books in contemporary times have sought to d…

Celebrating Jewish Literature: Graphic fiction and nonfiction

By Rabbi Rachel Esserman

  • A memoir: “We Are On Our Own”

When is a memoir not exactly a memoir? In the case of “We Are On Our Own: A Memoir” by Miriam Katin (Drawn and Quarterly), it’s when the graphic artist is really telling her mother’s story, more than her own. Her memoir …

Celebrating Jewish Literature: Nontraditional biographies

By Rabbi Rachel Esserman

The dictionary defines a biography as an account of someone’s life. Normally, that means outlining the events that took place between a person’s birth and death. However, two recent works are as much, if not more, interested ion the aftereffects of their subject…

Celebrating Jewish Literature: Two mysteries and a thriller

By Rabbi Rachel Esserman

  • The most Jewish content: “Sunset Empire”

A new subgenre of detective fiction features alternative versions of our world. For example, in “Sunset Empire: A Morris Baker Novel” by Josh Weiss (Grand Central), while World War II and the Holocaust did take pl…