The Newish Jewish Encyclopedia: From Abraham to Zabars and Everything in Between
By (Author) Liel Leibovitz
By (author) Mark Oppenheimer
By (author) Stephanie Butnick
By (author) Tablet
Workman Publishing
Artisan Books
1st October 2019
United States
General
Non Fiction
Judaism: life and practice
Reference works
305.8924003
Hardback
320
Width 200mm, Height 248mm, Spine 32mm
1140g
From the hosts of Tablet magazine's wildly popular Unorthodox podcast, The Newish Jewish Encyclopedia is an edifying, entertaining, and thoroughly modern introduction to Judaism. It offers everything: from an illustrated guide to determining different Hasidic sects based on their garb to practical advice for throwing an unconventional Jewish wedding to humorous, accessible explanations of Judaism's myriad holidays. The book is an alphabetical encyclopedia of short entries some profane, some profound, and some both heavy on the graphics and, like contemporary Judaism itself, featuring a panoply of divergent voices, all amusing and well-informed and none in perfect agreement. By weaving together the essential and the esoteric, the snarky and the earnest, the Jewish and the Jew-ish, this book honours its title, offering a truly unorthodox approach to Judaism and allowing each reader to find his or her point of connection with the culture, the tradition, and the religion. Inside, under any given letter, readers will find short essays evocatively explaining Judaism's key holidays and practices and why they still matter today; visual guides to things Jews love, like smoked fish and how to tell your gravlax from your pastrami-smoked salmon; definitive lists of things that matter, from the best Christmas songs written by Jews to the most essential Seinfeld episodes; advice from an Orthodox sex guru, a professional bridesmaid-for-hire, and other people whose wisdom would benefit Jews and non-Jews alike; brief histories of Jewish traditions new and old, such as the sacred ritual of eating Chinese food on December 25; a vocabulary of words and phrases only Jews use; and so much more.
An illustrated, smart and comic guide, well-attuned to this moment.
Jewish Week
Crams in just about everything you need to know about Jewish culture and history from the Torah to Chinese food. . . . A weighty tome that just begs to be picked up, thumbed through, and quoted from. It is exhaustive but not exhausting, a thorough examination of Jewish themes presented as hors doeuvres to entice a larger meal.
The Times of Israel
Deeply entertaining and highly educational. . . . Adding their thoroughly modern compendium to a long tradition of Jewish scholarship, the authors have served up a colorful array of all things Jewish for Jews and non-Jews alike.
Broadway World
Alternately irreverent and profoundbut always informative. . . . A great gift.
BookPage
This delightfully irreverent romp through Jewish history and culture is the outgrowth ofTabletmagazines podcast,Unorthodox, and considers itself the updated version ofThe Jewish Catalog(1973). As withCatalog, podcast hosts and coauthors Butnick, Liel Leibovitz, and Mark Oppenheimer claim this chronicle is not a comprehensive or exhaustive survey of all things Jewish. To that end, the biblical hero Judah Maccabee is one kickass priest, Jewish Community Centers are places where Gentiles play racquetball, and Long Island is the other Promised Land. Culturally, the authors make a convincing argument for Jews as mediators of black music and even responsible for the beloved Christmas tunes White Christmas and Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer. Bernie Madoff finds reference only under the generic moniker,shonde, or one who brings shame to the community, where he keeps company with Eliot Spitzer and Anthony Weiner. On a more serious note in a compilation filled with humor, brevity is the signature mark of that which requires mention, but not gloryAdolf Hitler, Nazis, and AuschwitzsArbeit Macht Frei(work sets you free) merit a single sentence each. VERDICTA welcome update on Jewish history and culture that is mostly just plain fun.
Library Journal, starred review
No dense, scholarly tome, this volume is pure fun, although serious topics are included. . . . . A reference work is rarely as readable as this one is. Informative and irreverent, welcoming and witty, it is enthusiastically recommended.
Booklist
Stephanie Butnick, Liel Leibovitz, and Mark Oppenheimer are the hosts of Unorthodox, the most popular Jewish podcast on iTunes.
StephanieButnick is the deputy editor of Tablet and has written for the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal.
Liel Leibovitz is a senior writer for Tablet and the author of several books, including, most recently, A Broken Hallelujah, a spiritual biography of Leonard Cohen.
Mark Oppenheimeris the former Beliefs columnist for the New York Times and the author of Thirteen and a Day: The Bar and Bat Mitzvah Across America.