2011: A Year in Books

By D.G. Myers
Monday, January 2, 2012

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.  The list itself is an essay on the breadth and diversity of Jewish experience.  Jewish observance and religious thought, ancient and modern, form one theme.  Another theme is the variety of Jewish lives in places from medieval Egypt to the 20th-century Pale of Settlement, encompassing figures from Trotsky to Modigliani.  Inevitably and grimly, the Holocaust appears both in the story of the Jewish "emperor" of the Lodz ghetto and in works by masters of Yiddish literature.  There is the glorious puzzle that America poses for Jews in fields from poetry to baseball.  And everywhere there appear stories of dislocation, from Cairo to Brooklyn, from Soviet Latvia to the free world, from Russia to Palestine and South Dakota.  For real readers, here is a feast—and a New Year's present. —The Editors.

Of the making of Jewish books there is no endand some of them are even worth reading.  The past 12 months have not produced a major Jewish novel; in fact, the best novel of the year was published by an obscure university press in Texas.  But histories, translations of Yiddish literature, selected poems from two of our finest poets, and several first-rate memoirs have rushed in to fill the gap.  And, as always, Jewish biography has proved to be a reliable category for the book-starved Jewish reader.  Here is a reader's guide to the top Jewish books of the past year, listed alphabetically by author's last name.

Jewish History and Thought

Jewish Literature and Memoirs

Since you have to start somewhere, you might start with John J. Clayton's Mitzvah Man, a wise and wonderfully readable novel about the power of the Jewish religion to save lives and change the world.  Lucette Lagnado's second memoir, The Arrogant Years, is poignant and brilliantly written, sweeping the reader between unfamiliar worlds with strange emotions.  Easily the best Jewish book of the past 12 months, though, is the posthumous selection of Irving Kristol's essays, gathered together under the title The Neoconservative Persuasion. If you disagree with Kristol politically, don't let the first word of the title turn you away: the second word is the key to these thought-provoking essays.  Kristol never writes polemically; he writes always to persuade, explaining himself fully and with plenty of surprises.  And his essays on Jewish life are among the best things ever written on the subject.

D.G. Myers, a critic and literary historian in the Melton Center for Jewish Studies at the Ohio State University, is the author of the blog Literary Commentary.


You can find this online at: http://www.jidaily.com/2011ayearinbooks


© Copyright 2024 Jewish Ideas Daily. All Rights Reserved.