Book Reviews

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…

CJL: The unusual history of a 16th century Black Jewish messiah

By Rabbi Rachel Esserman

Minor historical figures can have an unusually large impact on history. Take for example, David Reubeni. In his introduction to “Diary of a Black Jewish Messiah: The Sixteenth-Century Journey of David Reubeni through Africa, the Middle East, and Europe” (Stamfor…

Celebrating Jewish Literature: Jewish humor vs. humor about Judaism

By Rabbi Rachel Esserman


Is there a difference between Jewish humor and humor about Judaism? Jennifer Caplan, author of “Funny You Don’t Look Funny: Judaism and Humor from the Silent Generation to Millennials” (Wayne State University Press), certainly thinks so, which is why she does…

Off the Shelf: Two novels about immigrants

By Rabbi Rachel Esserman

Reading two novels that focus on similar time periods and characters can make for interesting reading. Reading two novels that were written and published almost 100 years apart makes for fascinating reading. If I hadn’t known that “Bread Givers” by Anzia Yezi…