Jewish Book Carnival discussion
What are you reading?
message 1:
by
BookOfLife
(new)
Jun 10, 2010 06:41AM

reply
|
flag
Just read an ARC of Hereville, a graphic novel which apparently began as a webcomic, with an 11-year-old Orthodox troll-fighting heroine as protagonist. I loved it! Now I have to check out the webcomic...


Envy!
I'm still waiting for my Hereville ARC to arrive. Mind you, I'll want to finish reading my autographed copy of Graphic Therapy (by Emily Steinberg) first --- and I'm only on chapter 2 of that one. Online version of that is at

Steven wrote: "I was considering posting about Hereville for the Carnival, but I'll choose something else if Heidi's already discussing that one on her blog."
Steven, go ahead and blog about Hereville. I wasn't planning to, plus you are the graphic novel expert!
Steven, go ahead and blog about Hereville. I wasn't planning to, plus you are the graphic novel expert!

I'm excited to see this group. My book club focuses almost exclusively on Jewish lit and I'm always searching for new titles to bring them. Which means I like to talk about Jewish lit.


Susan wrote: "I just finished Ruchama King's Seven Blessings last night -- and learned of this group and the event this morning. Talk about signs trying to tell me something!
I'm excited to see this group. My b..."
I read this book a few years ago. I did not like it particularly. Every book is not for everyone.
Happy reading.
I read Sima's Undergarments for Women about a month ago and I found it really moving. Not happy, but meaningful. I think if I hadn't found stuff that related to my own feelings, I would have just found it depressing, though.
Just now reading Jon Papernick's There Is No Other. Very well written, but confusing to me, as short stories often are. I feel like I don't understand the point of a lot of them. I am often mystified by short stories.
Just now reading Jon Papernick's There Is No Other. Very well written, but confusing to me, as short stories often are. I feel like I don't understand the point of a lot of them. I am often mystified by short stories.

I need to add Sima's Undergarments to my tbr list (I think the Papernick is already there). But I'm very curious about your comments re: short stories. Can you say some more about what makes them confusing/mystifying to you? (As the author of a forthcoming short story collection, I'm especially interested in your thoughts!)


I'm new to the group...glad to be here! I recently reread Are You There God, It's Me Margaret. I loved that book so much as a kid. It was the first time I remember finding myself inside a story.
To answer Erika's question about short stories: I often find when I read short stories written for adults that the characters act in weird or cruel ways, that I don't understand their motivations, and I don't understand why the author would want to make me think about people acting so weird or cruel. I'm a kidlit person so maybe I'm just used to having things made a little more obvious; also, I'm used to stories with a more hopeful flavor. Adult lit is often too cynical or sad for me, and this seems to be especially true in short story format.

Thank you so much for that thoughtful response, Heidi. I hope that my characters don't necessarily act in weird or cruel ways, but it's true that a lot of the literary fiction that I'm familiar with can veer toward the sad.
You might find this blog post relevant/interesting:

The book I'm reading now, which I'm really enjoying, is:


"Exile" by Richard North Patterson, not Jewish.
But the book is about Jewish issues.
Did anybody read Extraordinary by Nancy Werlin? It's fantasy with a mild Jewish theme. We have far too little Jewish fantasy, IMHO, and I found this story quite compelling.

Have not read it--I'm usually not a big fantasy fan
--but my publisher just suggested a new book that does look pretty interesting: .


I just finished Confessions of a Closet Catholic by Sarah Darer Littman. I thought it was a wonderful book about a young Jewish girl "testing" her ideas of religion and discovering what it all means to her.


I've heard great things about this book...looking forward to reading it!

YES! But I wonder now if that title caused confusion for people and kept some Jewish kids from finding the book. That would be a shame.

I am still sorting out all of my thoughts. But it is an extraordinary book. I am grateful to the German Book Office for my free copy.

Susan, glad you liked Seven Blessings by Ruchama King. I loved the book, too, and Ruchama is a friend of mine.
I'm reading Natan Sharansky's Fear No Evil. I just finished Gertruda's Oath - a true Holocaust tale, so worth reading.


A much more stimulating book is The History of Love by Nicole Krauss.




Still a good read.

I read All Other Nights last summer. It was quite exciting, but by the end I was wrung out. I felt like "why does the author want to torture these characters, and by extension, me?" LOL, I guess that's why I'm a fan of children's literature, it's never as dark and hopeless as adult fiction.

As for why the characters were so tortured, I found that to be part of the point. Jacob goes through hell, literally. His appearance is altered, and he is forced to watch people turn away from him. He's not a glorious soldier, doing his duty for his country. He's broken, and people -- including his own parents -- shun him.
Yet at the end, there's incredible love and redemption.
It's a beautiful message.

As for why the characters were so tortured, I found that to be part of the point. Jacob goes through hell, literally. His a..."
I hadn't read her other books, but I was eager to read this one in part because it explored an element of American Jewish history I didn't know much about. I'm now looking forward to a new novel by Alan Cheuse (Song of Slaves in the Desert) that appears to cover some similar territory. has sold me.

What I enjoyed the most about the novel, was the historical background. Dara Horn did alot of research to cover about Jews and Civil war. If you have a paperback edition, she did a very interested interview in the back of the book. I enjoy reading a book, when I want to learn about the historical facts, and do my own research.

Horn also participated in an online chat about a year ago for the Jewish Book Council's Twitter Book Club. All of the archived chat transcripts are available at (and you'll notice my particular interest in the upcoming chat!).


Whitethorn: Poems
and so should you!
Adam Kirsch had a great review of this book, too, in Tablet:

Lots of food for thought in this book In the Garden of Beasts: Love, Terror, and an American Family in Hitler's Berlin




..."
Congratulations, Revital, and congrats on the excellent reviews, too.

Books mentioned in this topic
Apeirogon (other topics)Call It Sleep (other topics)
In the Land of Armadillos: Stories (other topics)
In the Land of Armadillos: Stories (other topics)
In the Land of Armadillos: Stories (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Roy Isacowitz (other topics)Henry Roth (other topics)
Tara Lynn Masih (other topics)
Daniel Gordis (other topics)
Lawrence Bush (other topics)
More...