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JewishLiFEbooks Days of Yore Great gifts for Chanukah: a photographic tour of Israel’s archaeological sites…a giant anthology of Jewish myths…an illustrated Jewish Bible for kids… by Bonny V. Fetterman Flights Into Biblical Archaeology by Duby Tal (aerial photography), Moni Haramati (piloting), and Shimon Gibson (text) (Albatross, 254 pp., $49 + shipping) Tal and Haramati, two former helicopter pilots in the Israeli Air Force, now specialists in aerial photography, teamed up with the Israel Antiquities Authority to produce this stunning, full-color book of aerial and land photographs of Israel’s archaeological sites. The photographs are arranged chronologically, depicting prehistoric times, the emergence of the Israelites, the impact of the Greek and Roman worlds, Judaism and Christianity, Islam and the Crusaders, and Ottoman Palestine. The text, by archaeologist Shimon Gibson, provides background on the excavation of the sites. For armchair archaeologists as well as the casual users of “Google Earth,” the aerial photographs are a treat, providing a unique perspective from which to view the ancient landscapes. Published in Israel, it can be ordered from online retailers. Tree of Souls: The Mythology of Judaism by Howard Schwartz, illustrated by Caren LoebelFried (Oxford University Press, 618 pp., paperback $29.95) Is there a Jewish mythology? If myth refers to “a people’s sacred stories about origins, deities, ancestors, and heroes,” the answer is yes—and now we have access to it, thanks to Judaism’s own answer to Joseph Campbell. With this unique anthology, Howard Schwartz, the preeminent reteller of Jewish stories, has created a genre. This vast compendium of 700 legends is organized by theme: God, Creation, Heaven, Hell, Holy Word (Torah), Holy Time (Festivals), Holy People, Holy Land, Exile, and the Messiah. Each story is followed by its source and Schwartz’s commentary. In many cases, Schwartz weaves together a rendition of the myth from several sources, giving the tale its fullest form. But the most exciting part is the range of sources that he has chosen to include. In addition to biblical, rabbinic, mystical, and folkloric sources, Schwartz delves into the Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha, Jewish writings of the Second Temple period that were left out of the Hebrew Bible. Summing up the range of topics, he writes: “These stories describe events such as the transformation of Enoch into the angel Metatron, the Giving of the Torah, the separation of God’s Bride from Her Spouse, the chain of events that has so far prevented the coming of the Messiah, and the attempts of Satan to gain inroads into the world of human beings.” One selection, “Tree of Souls,” bears the same title as the book: “God has a tree of flowering souls in Paradise…. When the souls grow ripe, they descend into the Treasury of Souls, where they are stored until they are called upon to be born. From this we learn that all souls are the fruit of the Holy One, blessed be He.” This parable seems to fit the flowering of the Jewish mythic imagination as well. The Children’s Illustrated Jewish Bible by Laaren Brown and Lenny Hort, illustrated by Eric Thomas (DK Publishing, 192 pp. with CD, $19.95) Ages 7–12 This completely revised edition of DK’s children’s Jewish Bible retells stories from the Tanakh in an accessible way, while staying close to the language of the text. Each page is embellished with colorful illustrations of the stories, maps of the ancient world, and photographs of the landscape of Israel. Finally, there is an audio CD with readings of 16 of the 70 stories in this book. I particularly liked the fact that this children’s Bible extends beyond the Five Books of Moses to the stories of the kings (Saul, David, Solomon), prophets (Elijah, Ezekiel, Jeremiah), and post-exilic figures (Daniel, Esther, Ezra). Older children will grasp some of the basic outlines of ancient Israel’s history. The retellings are never pedantic and reflect a Jewish approach to learning Torah. “The stories of the Bible are great stories—and one of the reasons they are so great is that they can be understood in many different ways and on many different levels,” the authors write in their Foreword. “We read the stories in the Torah over again each year, so that as we grow up and change, we can see new questions in each story.” Bonny V. Fetterman is literary editor of Reform Judaism magazine. For Discussion The Union for Reform Judaism recommends two Significant Jewish Books each quarter for individuals and book groups. Study and discussion guides are available at http://urj.org/books. Saving Stanley: The Brickman Stories by Scott Nadelson (Hawthorne Books & Literary Arts, 212 pp., paperback $15.95) On the surface, the Brickmans seem like an ordinary middle-class Jewish family living in suburban New Jersey. But in Scott Nadelson’s stories, the Brickmans fracture into four distinct individuals—Arthur, the calm, reliable father who is seldom there; Hannah, the compulsively attentive mother; Jared, the chubby adolescent who becomes an obsessed body builder in high school; and Daniel, the younger brother who, according to his grandfather, “doesn’t know who he wants to be.” Dipping into their psyches at different times, these stories reveal their separate inner worlds. Saving Stanley, Nadelson’s first story collection, contains eight stories about the Brickmans. In “Young Radicals,” Daniel is fascinated by his Russian-born grandfather who witnessed the October revolution. But by the time Daniel is old enough to ask him about his experiences, he sadly observes, “my grandfather lived almost exclusively in the immediate present and the distant past.... His second wife, Rose, spent most of her time trying to convince him of the things that had just happened to him.” In “Kosher,” we meet Daniel again as a recent college graduate torn by doubts about his future. He spends a year traveling in Europe, taking odd jobs and hoping to find his direction before returning to live in his parents’ home. Meanwhile, his mother, a high school French teacher, despairs about the son who seems so lost: “How could she tell the teachers what her son was doing with his life? A smart Jewish boy who’d given up great opportunities to become a bum.” Nadelson, who won the Reform Judaism Prize for Jewish Fiction in 2007 for his subsequent story collection, The Cantor’s Daughter, comments: “Ordinary lives are never so ordinary; they’re full of conflict and mystery.” The Man in the White Sharkskin Suit: My Father’s Exodus from Old Cairo to the New World by Lucette Lagnado (Ecco, 340 pp., $25.95) Awarded the 2008 Sami Rohr Prize for Jewish Literature, Lucette Lagnado’s elegant memoir (reviewed in RJ Spring 2008) recreates her family’s life in Cairo until they were forced to flee Nasser’s regime in 1962. In her acceptance speech she described Old Cairo as “a glamorous, intensely cosmopolitan city that was multicultural in the true meaning of the term, a society in which Jews and Moslems and European Christians managed to coexist with a harmony that some in post-9/11 America may find hard to imagine.” But after World War II, convulsive departures were under way. “One after the other, Jewish communities in Libya, Algeria, Yemen, Iraq, Tunisia, Morocco, Lebanon, and of course, Egypt, dispersed,” she writes in her memoir. “Nearly one million Oriental Jews scattered to the four winds.” Her poignant immigration story focuses on her father, Leon, a sophisticated “man about town” in Cairo who never recovers his cultural bearings in Paris or New York, the foreign cities to which he has to adapt in late life. This once proud man is subjected to demeaning treatment by social service agencies, and in old age is reduced to selling fake designer ties on subways. When Lucette, his youngest and favorite child, develops Hodgkin’s disease at age 16, he finds himself powerless to protect her, except through his prayers from “the worn little red prayer book he carried in his pocket at all times.” NEW BOOKS | URJ PRESS A Faithful Spirit: Preparing for Chanukah Rabbi Benjamin Levy’s study text to the medieval midrash M’gillat Antiochus— traditionally read during Chanukah in Italian and Yemenite synagogues—explores the midrash’s flexible approach to maintaining one’s Jewish identity while living in a nonJewish world. Israel at 60 Songbook Thirty-six selections encompass the most significant songs of Israel’s 60-year history. Contact the URJ Press at 888-489-8242, www.URJBooksandMusic.com.