Cynthia Travis reviews Deena Metzger’s “La Vieja: a Journal of Fire”
Jewish Wisdom
God is Here: Reimagining the Divine
|
Rabbi Toba Spitzer’s book offers access points to Jewish prayer and practice that will be of value for those who have found the language of classical Judaism, particularly the “Big Powerful Person” God troubling.
Reviews of Books & Films
A Review of “Performing Truth: Works of Radical Memory for Times of Social Amnesia”
|
Arlene Goldbard reviews L.M. Bogad’s “Performing Truth: Works of Radical Memory for Times of Social Amnesia”.
Reviews of Books & Films
Does “Interspiritual” Imply Post-Jewish?
|
Herbet Levine reviews Haviva Ner-David, “Dreaming Against the Current: A Rabbi’s Soul Journey”
Reviews of Books & Films
Who Am I? The Perplexing Nature of Jewish Feminist Identity
|
A review of Three Groundbreaking Jewish Feminists Pursuing Social Justice, Sharon Leder, Hybrid Global Publishers, 2020
Reviews of Books & Films
How Jews and Christians Read the Bible Differently
|
A review and response to Amy-Jill Levine and Marc Zvi Brettler’s The Bible With and Without Jesus: How Jews and Christians Read the Bible Differently (HarperOne, 2020).
Reviews of Books & Films
A Democratic Socialist’s Fifty-Year Adventure
|
A review by Ronald Aronson of Milton Tambor’s “A Democratic Socialist’s Fifty-Year Adventure”
Reviews of Books & Films
Two Reviews of the Life of Daniel Berrigan
|
Tikkun salutes the life of Catholic social change priest Dan Berrigan with 2 reviews
Reviews of Books & Films
Another American Horror Story
|
The U.S. is guilty of murdering an innocent but flawed woman.
Reviews of Books & Films
Review of Ariel Dorfman’s Book “Darwin’s Ghosts”
|
Deena Metzger reviews the novel “Darwin’s Ghosts” by Ariel Dorfman, not quite a coming of age story or hero’s journey, but a journey where a young boy must learn who he is outside of the superficial life to which he presumed he was entitled
Reviews of Books & Films
Review of Radical Loving: One God, One World, One People by Rabbi Wayne D. Dosick
|
Rabbi Wayne Dosick’s striking new book, “Radical Loving” creates a powerful path for change that requires no organized faith commitment. He offers sensible do-able advise on conducting a life that will help sustain the planet, the humans, and other species living on earth.