Anne Frank and Me
Cherie Bennett and Jeff Gottesfeld
Book
In one moment Nicole Burns's life changes forever. The sound of gunfire at an Anne Frank exhibit,...
Disobedience (2018)
Movie Watch
A woman returns to her Orthodox Jewish home after the death of her rabbi father and stirs up...
romance drama
Capturing The Friedmans (2003)
Movie
Documentary on the Friedmans, a seemingly typical, upper-middle-class Jewish family whose world is...
Resistance (2020)
Movie
The story of mime Marcel Marceau as he works with a group of Jewish boy scouts and the French...
From Cult to Culture: Fragments Toward a Critique of Historical Reason
Jacob Taubes, Charlotte Elisheva Fonrobert, Amir Engel and Jan Assmann
Book
After launching his career with the 1947 publication of his dissertation, Occidental Eschatology,...
Paul at the Crossroads of Cultures: Theologizing in the Space Between
Book
Based on recent studies in intercultural communication Kathy Ehrensperger applies the paradigm of...
The Basic Beliefs of Judaism: A Twenty-first-Century Guide To a Timeless Tradition
Book
One of the oldest monotheistic religions known to humankind, Judaism has withstood the tests of...
The Essential Fictions
Book
The Essential Fictions offers contemporary readers seventy-two short stories by one of...
The Chocolate Lady (94 KP) rated Nine Folds Make a Paper Swan in Books
Oct 6, 2020
I think the problem was that Gillian's inexperience made her try a bit too hard to impress the Jewish and Irish aspects of this book. I've read quite a few books by Irish authors, and I've never felt like I was overwhelmed with jargon and slang, some of which I didn't understand. Unfortunately, these interjections came far too often, and they were jarring, to say the least. Certainly, her editor should have realized this, and toned it down - unless that person too was worried that the book wouldn't sound either Jewish or Irish enough for the American public.
For me, the heavy use of Irish and Yiddish slang words feels pretentious. More importantly, if your story doesn't sound Irish or Jewish enough so that you have to throw these in at every turn, then maybe you've not chosen the right subject matter.
I might have continued on, doing my best to ignore this, but the final death knell for me came when she broke my #1 cardinal rule of writing Jewish characters - a glaring mistake on a simple point of Judaism. I am willing to forgive a whole lot, but when someone describes a strict Jewish household having lamb with a side dish of potatoes, dripping with butter in the same meal (i.e., she mixed milk and meat, and it is the most basic of all things that Jewish dietary laws forbid), that's a bridge too far. No one who goes to the amount of trouble she describes in this book to get their house Kosher and ready for Passover, would ever in their right mind put butter on potatoes for a meat meal.
If any of this can be fixed before publication, I would be thrilled to read a new version of this book.
Klezmer: Music, History, and Memory
Book
Klezmer: Music, History, and Memory is the first comprehensive study of the musical structure and...