The holidays are over, the coffee-table books have all been unwrapped and set aside, and winter isn't going anywhere for a while. In short, it's time to settle in for some good reading. The literary critic D. G. Myers here presents the 38 best Jewish books of 2011, all of which merit your attention.
2010: A Year in BooksD.G. Myers, Jewish Ideas Daily. From the popular to the scholarly, a reader's and buyer's guide to 34 of the best books of 2010. SAVE
Retrieving American Jewish FictionD.G. Myers, Jewish Ideas Daily. A historical symposium of some neglected classics, and an introduction to the avot and imahot of American Jewish writing. SAVE
The poet Samuel Menashe, who died on August 22 at the age of eighty-five, grew up in Queens, New York. His poems have always been appreciated by other poets; but, until late in his life, his poetry did not receive the attention it deserved.
The saddest saga in Jewish literary history involves some 500 Soviet Yiddish artists who were stolen away by Stalin's henchmen in the late 1940's. They met a tragic fate after twenty years under a relentlessly repressive regime whose creation they had greeted with utopian fervor.
Surreal LifeDara Horn, Forward. Der Nister wrote at the last gasp of a European Jewish imagination, when Jewish writers had the freedom to write for an audience that never would question the worthiness of their art. SAVE
On August 12, 1952, thirteen major Soviet Jewish figures were executed for espionage, bourgeois nationalism, "lack of true Soviet spirit," and treason, including a plot to hand the Crimea over to American and Zionist imperialists.
Inextinguishable SoulsNational Conference on Soviet Jewry. A commemorative booklet featuring the work of Markish, Fefer, and other murdered poets, along with Chaim Grade's "Elegy for the Soviet Yiddish Writers." (PDF) SAVE
The second International Yiddish Theater Festival, an elaborate ten-day fete whose program ranges from carnavalesque performances to academic symposia, just wrapped up last week in Montreal. What is especially surprising about this celebration is that Montreal is a city with a Jewish population of less than 80,000.
In Your FaceSamuel Menashe. Poetry. Eyes that spurn yet invite Like spikes in the sunlight Of Manhattan's high-rise— Babylon's ladies outshine Daughters of Jerusalem, Zion is no easy climb. SAVE
Manger's M’gilah, and OursYehudah Mirsky. Jewish Ideas Daily. In the Purim story as riotously told by the great Yiddish poet Itzik Manger, God is so absent that His providence appears only by way of the Devil. SAVE
Pound FoolishJohn Stoehr. Forward. While Pound hailed Hitler, and Gertrude Stein cheered Franco, William Carlos Williams eschewed doctrine and orthodoxy. Herbert Leibowitz's compelling new biography of the modernist poet shows why. SAVE
What Does Paul Goodman Mean to Me?Michael Walzer. Dissent. He wasn't a particularly nice person, he wasn't a great novelist, he was a fine poet only sometimes, and he wasn't much of a historian—but, but, but . . . SAVE
Hanukkah (from "Meditations on the Fall and Winter Holidays")Charles Reznikoff. Poems of Charles Reznikoff. Go swiftly in your chariot, my fellow Jew, you who are blessed with horses; and I will follow as best I can afoot, bringing with me perhaps a word or two. Speak your learned and witty discourses and I will utter my word or two— not by might not by power but by Your Spirit, Lord. SAVE
Hayim Nahman Bialik (1873–1934) was the poet of Jewish national rebirth and a leading light of cultural Zionism. To be more precise, he was a power station. Composing poems, writing essays, founding journals, raising up the sparks of Israel's past, Bialik became an essential source of energy for Jewish cultural revival.
It was bound to happen. Abraham Sutzkever, born July 15, 1913, in Smorgon, Lithuania, one of the great poets of the twentieth century and the last towering figure of modern Yiddish literature, died this Wednesday, January 20, in Tel Aviv, where he had lived since 1947. A descendant of rabbis, Sutzkever applied to the writing of poetry the standards of refinement that his ancestors had practiced in obedience to Jewish religious law. During World War II, when he was herded into the ghetto with the rest of Vilna Jewry, he determinedly continued composing, persuaded that "the angel of poetry" protects the creator of timeless—but only of truly timeless—work.