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Visiting Scribe Win a copy
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February 21st JBC/Jewcy Twitter Book Club
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Weekly Book Recommendations
Updates from The ProsenPeople and JBC news
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The Storyteller
Jodi Picoult
Atria/Emily Bestler Books, 2013. 480 pp. $28.99
Sage Singer is a baker, a loner, until she befriends an old man who's particularly beloved in her community. Josef Weber is everyone's favorite, retired teacher and Little League coach. One day he asks Sage for a favor: to kill him. Shocked, Sage refuses--and then he confesses his darkest secret--he deserves to die because he had been a Nazi SS guard. And Sage's grandmother is a Holocaust survivor. How do you react to evil living next door? Can someone who's committed truly heinous acts ever atone with subsequent good behavior? Should you offer forgiveness to someone if you aren't the party who was wronged? And, if Sage even considers the request, is it murder...or justice?
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Israel Has Moved
Diana Pinto
Harvard University Press, 2013. 224 pp. $24.95
Israel has changed. The country was born in Europe's shadow, haunted by the Holocaust and inspired by the Enlightenment. But for Israelis today, Europe is hardly relevant, and the country's ties to the broader West, even to America, are fraying. Where is Israel heading? How do citizens of an increasingly diverse nation see themselves globally and historically?
Diana Pinto presents a country simultaneously moving forward and backward, looking outward and turning in on itself. In business, Israel is forging new links with the giants of Asia, and its booming science and technology sectors are helping define the future for the entire world. But in politics and religion, Israelis are increasingly self-absorbed, building literal and metaphorical walls against hostile neighbors and turning to ancient religious precepts for guidance here and now. Pinto captures the new moods and mindsets, the anxieties and hopes of Israelis today in sharply drawn sketches of symbolically charged settings. She takes us on the roads to Jerusalem, to border control at Ben Gurion Airport, to a major Israeli conference in Jerusalem, to a hill overlooking the Dome of the Rock and Temple Mount, to the heart of Israel's high-tech economy, and to sparkling new malls and restaurants where people of different identities share nothing more than a desire to ignore one another.
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From The ProsenPeople
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The three of us waited expectantly and somewhat nervously in the seminar room, wondering why we had been summoned by our professor. Nu, what was going on - why the special meeting?
Steve Stern is, in my opinion, the best under-recognized American Jewish writer currently writing.
New Reviews
This week's reviews...
In Irena Klepfisz's remarkable poem, "Etlekhe verter oyf mame-loshn / A few words in the mother tongue," the speaker presents different female identities in the form of a Yiddish vocabulary list.
In my first novel, I wrote from the point of view of a Nazi. In my new novel, The Wanting, I've taken on the persona of a suicide bomber from a village outside of Bethlehem.
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Check back all week for guest blog posts from Michael Lavigne for the Jewish Book Council and MyJewishLearning's Visiting Scribe series!
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