Monday, October 20, 2025
Adam Kirsch, The People and the Books: 18 Classics of Jewish Literature (2016)
Alex Star recommended this to me, as he did the books by Halbertal reviewed below, when I asked him about books on Jewish thought and history. Kirsch's book was superb, each of its chapters a gem about a different classic. I came away feeling that my understanding of the tradition had been both broadened and deepened. In many cases - as with the medieval Zohar, the source of Kabbalah, Jewish mysticism, or the Tsenerne, the early modern Yiddish-language digest of Biblical stories and lessons for the shallowly literate - I had simply not been aware of these works at all. In other cases, as with Deuteronomy, Philo of Alexandria, Spinoza, and Herzl, Kirsch significantly deepened my understanding and appreciation of the texts and authors. Next I plan to read Kirsch's book about the Talmud, based on his own seven-plus year reading of it.
Labels:
Deuteronomy,
Halbertal,
Herzl,
Judaism,
Kabbalah,
mysticism,
Philo of Alexandria,
Spinoza,
Talmud,
Yiddish
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