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  • The New Jewish Canon is both text and textbook, a rich collection of major Jewish ideas from the late twentieth and early twenty-first century. With over eighty excerpts from key primary source texts and insightful corresponding essays by leading scholars, on topics of history and memory, Jewish politics and the public square, religion and religiosity, and identities and communities, The New Jewish Canon promises to start conversations from the seminar room to the dinner table. (Academic Studies Pres)

    Dr. Yehuda Kurtzer is president of the Shalom Hartman Institute. Yehuda is a leading thinker on the essential questions facing contemporary Jewish life. He is the author of Shuva: The Future of the Jewish Past, the co-editor of The New Jewish Canon, the host of the Identity/Crisis podcast.  He writes, teaches, and lectures widely about contemporary Jewish life. 

    Yehuda is trained as a scholar of ancient Judaism and rabbinics with a doctorate in Jewish Studies from Harvard University and previously served as a member of the faculty at Brandeis University, where he held the inaugural Chair in Jewish Communal Innovation.

    In this wide ranging conversation Yehuda will reflect on his unusual upbringing as the child of a diplomat with a front row seat to Middle East politics, on falling in love with second century rabbinic Judaism and early Christianity, and his optimistic take on a new path forward for Israel and the Middle East. 

    Yehuda Kurtzer’s Five Books:



    As a Driven Leaf, by Milton Steinberg


    Zakhor, by Yosef Hayim Yerushalmi


    In The Land of Israel, by Amos Oz


    The Safekeep, by Yael van der Wouden


    The New Jewish Canon, edited by Yehuda Kurtzer and Claire E. Sufrin


    The Five Books has the advisory and promotional support of The Jewish Book Council. 

    The Five Books is fiscally sponsored by FJC, a 501c3 public charity. 

    Hosted by Tali Rosenblatt-Cohen
    Produced by Odelia Rubin

    Artwork by Dena Friedman
    Music by Dov Rosenblatt and Blue Dot Sessions

  • On Being Jewish Now is an intimate and hopeful collection of 75 meaningful, smart, funny, sad, emotional, and inspiring essays from today’s authors and advocates about what it means to be Jewish, how life has changed since the attacks on October 7th, 2023, and the unique culture that brings this group together. 
     
    Contributors include Mark Feuerstein, Jill Zarin, Steve Leder, Joanna Rakoff, Amy Ephron, Lisa Barr, Annabelle Gurwitch, Daphne Merkin, Bradley Tusk, Sharon Brous, Jenny Mollen, Nicola Kraus, Caroline Leavitt, and many others. (Zibby Books)

    Zibby Owens is the bestselling author of Blank: A Novel, Bookends: A Memoir of Love, Loss, and Literature, Princess Charming, and the forthcoming novel Overheard. She is the editor of three anthologies: On Being Jewish Now, Moms Don’t Have Time To: A Quarantine Anthology and Moms Don’t Have Time To Have Kids: A Timeless Anthology. Zibby is the founder and CEO of Zibby Media, which includes the Zibby Books boutique publishing house, Zibby’s Bookshop, an independent bookstore in Santa Monica, CA, the award-winning daily podcast Moms Don’t Have Time to Read Books, which she hosts, Zibby’s Book Club, and Zibby Retreats for book lovers. 

    Zibby shares what draws her to books and writing, and what compels her to speak up for Jewish authors.

    Zibby Owens' Five Books:


    Night by Elie Wiesel

    10/7 by Lee Yaron

    Drinking: A Love Story by Caroline Knapp

    Here One Moment, by Liane Moriarty

    On Being Jewish Now, edited by Zibby Owens


    Other Books & Resources:

    Slow Motion by Dani Shapiro 

    On Being Jewish Now Substack 



    The Five Books has the advisory and promotional support of The Jewish Book Council. November 24 to December 24 is Jewish Book Month! Celebrate with Jewish Book Council. https://www.jewishbookcouncil.org/events/celebrate   

    The Five Books is fiscally sponsored by FJC, a 501c3 public charity. 

    Hosted by Tali Rosenblatt-Cohen
    Produced by Odelia Rubin

    Artwork by Dena Friedman
    Music by Dov Rosenblatt and Blue Dot Sessions

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  • Henrietta Szold: Hadassah and the Zionist Dream reveals the complex life and work of Henrietta Szold, renowned as the founder of Hadassah, the Women’s Zionist Organization of America. She later moved to Mandate Palestine to help shape education, health, and social services there. The pinnacle of her career came in her seventies, when she took on the task of directing the Youth Aliyah program, which rescued thousands of young people from the Nazis and resettled them in Palestine.

    Using Szold’s copious letters, diaries, and essays, along with other archival documents, Francine Klagsbrun reveals Szold as a multi-faceted human being whose impact on women’s lives as well as on education and health systems still resonates. (Jewish Lives Series, Yale University Press).

    Francine Klagsbrun has also had a tremendous impact on the story of American Jewish women. Born in 1931, she has been a passionate advocate for women in Jewish religious life. Francine is the author of more than a dozen books, including Lioness: Golda Meir and the Nation of Israel, which won the National Jewish Book Award in 2017. 

    She has been a columnist for New York Jewish Week and Moment, is a contributing editor to Lilith, and is on the editorial board of Hadassah Magazine. Her writings have appeared in the New York Times, the Boston Globe, Newsweek, Ms. magazine, and other national publications. 

    Charming and wry, Francine reflects on her unlikely Jewish education as a girl in the 1930s and 40s, on the seeds of her feminist activism, and on why she is grateful to have reinvigorated Szold’s legacy.  


    Francine Klagsbrun’s Five Books:


    The Bible

    Marjorie Morningstar, by Herman Wouk

    The Plot Against America, by Philip Roth 

    The Propagandist, by Cécile Desprairies

    Henrietta Szold: Hadassah and the Zionist Dream, by Francine Klagsbrun


    The Five Books has the advisory and promotional support of The Jewish Book Council. November 24 to December 24 is Jewish Book Month! Celebrate with Jewish Book Council. https://www.jewishbookcouncil.org/events/celebrate   

    The Five Books is fiscally sponsored by FJC, a 501c3 public charity. 

    Hosted by Tali Rosenblatt-Cohen
    Produced by Odelia Rubin

    Artwork by Dena Friedman
    Music by Dov Rosenblatt and Blue Dot Sessions

  • In Magical Meet Cute, Faye Kaplan is definitely happy alone. That is, until she finds her town papered with anti-Semitic flyers. Desperate for comfort, Faye drunkenly turns to her pottery. A golem protector is just what her town needs…and adding details to make him her ideal man can’t hurt, right? 

    When a mysterious stranger turns up the next day, Greg seems too good to be true, causing Faye to wonder if his appearance might be anything but a coincidence. (Mira)

    Jean started her career in television where she won numerous awards including a Daytime Emmy. She spent five years in rabbinical school before her chronic illness forced her to withdraw. 

    In this conversation, Jean reflects on “second wave” Jewish books and finding herself represented on the page, on Jewish magic (or being a “Jewitch”), and Jewish joy.  

    Jean Meltzer’s Five Books:

    The Bible

    Once More with Chutzpah by Haley Neil

    Woman Warrior by Maxine Hong Kingston

    Love you a Latke by Amanda Elliot

    Magical Meet Cute by Jean Meltzer


    Books and Resources on Jewish Magic:

    Jewish Magic and Superstition Joshua Trachtenberg

    The Golem Redux by Elizabeth R. Baer

    The Golem and the Won­drous Deeds of the Mahar­al of Prague by Yudl Rosenberg

    The Golem by Gustav Meyrink


    Throwing Sheyd (Podcast)


    The Vigil (Movie)

    https://www.sefaria.org/


    The Jewish Joy Community:


    https://www.facebook.com/p/The-Jewish-Joy-Book-Club-61555704527625/ 


    https://www.instagram.com/thejewishjoybookclub/ 


    https://thejewishjoybox.com/ 


    Other Books Jean Mentioned:
    Marry Me by Midnight by Felicia Grossman


    The Five Books has the advisory and promotional support of The Jewish Book Council. November 24 to December 24 is Jewish Book Month! Celebrate with Jewish Book Council. https://www.jewishbookcouncil.org/events/celebrate 

    The Five Books is fiscally sponsored by FJC, a 501c3 public charity.

    Hosted by Tali Rosenblatt-Cohen
    Produced by Odelia Rubin

    Artwork by Dena Friedman
    Music by Dov Rosenblatt

  • Benjamin Resnick’s debut novel, Next Stop,  is a work of speculative fiction that explores the precariousness of Jewish American life through the lens of one family. After a black hole consumes the State of Israel, similar strange events occur in cities around the world, ushering in a time of chaos as well as miracles. (Simon and Schuster) Benjamin Resnick is the rabbi of the Pelham Jewish Center in New York. 

    Our wide ranging and thought-provoking conversation touches on the recurring appearance of false messiahs, Hebrew as the enduring language of Jews, and Jewish joy even in times of trauma.

    Benjamin’s Resnick’s Five Books:

    Maus by Art Speigelman

    The Tevye Stories by Sholem Aleichem

    A River Runs Through It by Norman Maclean

    Skinny Legs and All by Tom Robbins

    Next Stop by Benjamin Resnick


    Relevant Links:

    Satan in Goray by Isaac Bashevis Singer


    Cooking Pot on display at the Museum of the Jewish Heritage


    The Five Books has the advisory and promotional support of The Jewish Book Council. November 24 to December 24 is Jewish Book Month! Celebrate with Jewish Book Council. https://www.jewishbookcouncil.org/events/celebrate

    The Five Books is fiscally sponsored by FJC, a 501c3 public charity.

    Hosted by Tali Rosenblatt Cohen
    Produced by Odelia Rubin

    Artwork by Dena Friedman
    Music by Dov Rosenblatt and Blue Dot Sessions

  • It is 1961 and the rural Dutch province of Overijssel is quiet. Living alone in her late mother’s country home, Isabel knows her life is as it should be—led by routine and discipline. But all is upended when her brother Louis brings his graceless new girlfriend Eva, leaving her at Isabel’s doorstep as a guest, to stay for the season.

    Mysterious, sophisticated, sensual, The Safekeep is “a brave and thrilling debut about facing up to the truth of history, and to one’s own desires” (The Guardian). (Simon and Schuster) 

    Yael memorably reflects on the mouse that helped her to make friends, her gravitation toward magic, the book that convinced her not to get a nose job, and the nature of complicity, trauma and reconciliation.

    Yael van der Wouden’s Five Books:


    Everything is Illuminated by Jonathan Safran Foer


    The Ministry of Special Cases by Nathan Englander and Spinning Silver by Naomi Novik


    In the Dream House by Carmen Maria Machado

    The Artist by Lucy Steeds (to be released early 2025)

    The Safekeep by Yael van der Wouden



    The Five Books has the advisory and promotional support of The Jewish Book Council. November 24 to December 24 is Jewish Book Month! Celebrate with Jewish Book Council. https://www.jewishbookcouncil.org/events/celebrate

    The Five Books is fiscally sponsored by FJC, a 501c3 public charity.

    Hosted by Tali Rosenblatt Cohen
    Produced by Odelia Rubin

    Artwork by Dena Friedman
    Music by Dov Rosenblatt

  • Join us  December 3rd! Each episode will feature a candid conversation with a Jewish author about five books that are near and dear to them.

    We’ll hear about the books that helped form their identities, the books that changed their worldview, and we’ll get the inside scoop on a new book they’ve just published.