Book Reviews

Celebrating Jewish Literature: Gender and the Talmud

By Rabbi Rachel Esserman

Nonbinary gendered individuals found in the Talmud: Max. K. Strassfeld (who uses the pronouns they/their) was fascinated by the discussions they discovered about them in the rabbinic text. Strassfeld wanted to know more, to not just understand what the rabbis though…

Celebrating Jewish Literature: The cost of war

By Rabbi Rachel Esserman

The Spanish Civil War 

Spain has a mixed Jewish history. Tales of tolerance and understanding while the country was under Muslim rule clash with the forced conversions and expulsions of the Jewish population during the reign of Christian monarchs Ferdinand II of A…

Celebrating Jewish Literature: A rom-com about romance....

By Rabbi Rachel Esserman

After being dumped

It’s bad enough that Lauren Leo is 41 and the last of her friends to marry. Well, to almost marry because in the opening chapter of Marilyn Simon Rothstein’s “Crazy to Leave You” (Lake Union Publishing) Lauren is dumped by her fiancé min…

Celebrating Jewish Literature: Summer, marriage and melodrama

By Rabbi Rachel Esserman

Google defines melodrama as “a sensational dramatic piece with exaggerated characters and exciting events intended to appeal to the emotions.” I consider melodrama to also include too many unbelievable coincidences and events. But that doesn’t mean melodrama i…

Celebrating Jewish Literature: Reconstructing a life

By Rabbi Rachel Esserman

How wonderful to read a memoir by someone who loves his mother. That love comes through clearly in Wayne Hoffman’s “The End of Her: Racing Against Alzheimer’s to Solve a Murder” (Heliotrope Books). Except for a short time when he was coming to terms with his…