Jewish Books
Jewish Books
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For more information about Jewish Books or other Judaica items, feel free to contact our Judaica experts with any questions or concerns.
Important Jewish Books
The variety in themes in Jewish books is vast, and includes religious, emotional, artistic, informative, historical, cultural, culinary and more. At World of Judaica, we operate all of our business from Israel, and therefore are at the centre of the political, economic, military, and cultural aspects that shape the nation of the Jewish people. This has all been chronicled in Israeli and Jewish books, yet it is a history so dense, not even dozens of books could tell the full story.
Jewish writing was flourishing in the land of Palestine from as early as the seventh and eighth centuries in the form of poetry. In the past few decades, many books related to the Jewish people tell a story through emotions and visuals. This is common in books about the Holocaust; for example, Leon Uris’s Mila18 about the Warsaw uprising, or Exodus about the Jewish refugees after WWII, and their attempt to build a nation. Other famous Jewish books include: Start Up Nation by Dan Senor and Saul Singer, Jerusalem: A Sotry of Forty Centuries by Teddy Kollek and Moshe Pearlman, The Sabbath by Abrahan Joshua Heschel, The Devil’s Arithmetic by Jane Yolen and My Life by Golda Meir.
Not all Jewish books discuss such sensitive topics. There are books on spiritual, cultural or culinary subjects. Life cycles (birth and marriage for example) are also popular subjects in Jewish books, Readers love to share and read about their own personal experiences of shopping in the market, lessons of Jewish dance or Yoga. Israeli authors that are known for their fiction are Jonathan Safran Foer, the American author of ‘Extremely Loud and Incredibly close’.Description
Jewish Books
For More Information
For more information about Jewish Books or other Judaica items, feel free to contact our Judaica experts with any questions or concerns.
Important Jewish Books
The variety in themes in Jewish books is vast, and includes religious, emotional, artistic, informative, historical, cultural, culinary and more. At World of Judaica, we operate all of our business from Israel, and therefore are at the centre of the political, economic, military, and cultural aspects that shape the nation of the Jewish people. This has all been chronicled in Israeli and Jewish books, yet it is a history so dense, not even dozens of books could tell the full story.
Jewish writing was flourishing in the land of Palestine from as early as the seventh and eighth centuries in the form of poetry. In the past few decades, many books related to the Jewish people tell a story through emotions and visuals. This is common in books about the Holocaust; for example, Leon Uris’s Mila18 about the Warsaw uprising, or Exodus about the Jewish refugees after WWII, and their attempt to build a nation. Other famous Jewish books include: Start Up Nation by Dan Senor and Saul Singer, Jerusalem: A Sotry of Forty Centuries by Teddy Kollek and Moshe Pearlman, The Sabbath by Abrahan Joshua Heschel, The Devil’s Arithmetic by Jane Yolen and My Life by Golda Meir.
Not all Jewish books discuss such sensitive topics. There are books on spiritual, cultural or culinary subjects. Life cycles (birth and marriage for example) are also popular subjects in Jewish books, Readers love to share and read about their own personal experiences of shopping in the market, lessons of Jewish dance or Yoga. Israeli authors that are known for their fiction are Jonathan Safran Foer, the American author of ‘Extremely Loud and Incredibly close’.