Micah Goodman asks us to go back to Yehuda Halevy’s medieval treatise and read it in a different way: not as a book expressing Jewish supremacy, but as a continuing dialogue about universal, humanistic trends integral to Judaism.
Shani Boianjiu grew up in Kfar Vradim and never imagined the success her first novel would have. In an interview with Haaretz, she confides: 'Ninety-nine percent of what I write wouldn’t happen'.
Israeli literature was willing to embrace poignant stories in Yiddish about shtetl life, but had a hard time stomaching ones about secure Jewish existence in America. The new short-story anthology ‘America’ helps fill in the gaps.
Antonio Munoz Molina accepts the Jerusalem Prize at the Jerusalem International Book Fair on Sunday, rejecting pressure to culturally boycott Israel in protest of its policies.
The Jerusalem Conference of Jewish Writers, Kisufim, often squeezes great writers into small rooms all over Jerusalem providing for good conversations but not too much room to move.
The book of conversations with Rabbi Chaim Amsellem could just as easily have been called ‘Everything You Always Wanted to Know About the Problems of Haredi Society But No Haredim Would Tell You.’ Now there’s someone who will.
A reading of Dan Daor’s book of essays and journeys is an experience of traveling the world in the company of a scholar. Even the red-light district in Amsterdam stirs in him deep musings, in this case on the Dutch history of tolerance.
This sometimes mythical tale about children – albeit aged 18 and up who have been granted the right to kill and be killed – is dark and surprisingly funny.
Israeli filmmaker Yair Moses, the central figure in A.B. Yehoshua’s newly translated latest novel, arrives in Spain to receive an honor and a prize at the end of a long, successful career, and finds himself having to engage in some unexpected self-reflection
While waiting to be airlifted from Ethiopia to Israel in the 1980s, Wuditu was seized from a refugee camp and became a child slave. At Wuditu’s request, Judie Oron shares the story of the girl she rescued.
In providing a space for literary discussion beyond the hallowed pages of old media, book blogs made it possible to chat with strangers who shared the same taste. Now those venerable publications have their own blogs and bloggers’ bylines are appearing in print.
The Jerusalem International Book Fair turns 50 this year, and adjusts to life without its longtime leader Zev Birger. Fair number 25 offers the book-loving public numerous opportunities to be exposed to writers who are very far from being the usual suspects.
In their jointly written investigation into the defining essence of the Jewish people, the father-and-daughter team of Amos Oz and Fania Oz-Salzberger come up with definition so reductive that one may end up no wiser regarding who’s a member of the club.