Note on the list: The following 12 books were picked solely because I own them, they were fairly recently published, and I really want to read them. For a broader list of recommendations, visit the Jewish Book Council's website and explore their vast variety of great books.
Contemporary Times
- The Best Place on Earth by Ayelet Tsabari (Random House): The stories in this collection are set in locals around the world and explore the contemporary Jewish experience with a global perspective.
- A Remarkable Kindness by Diana Bletter (William Morrow): This novel is about four very different Israeli women whose friendship sustains them through their shared and individual troubles.
The Twentieth Century
- The Ice Cream Queen of Orchard Street by Susan Jane Gilman (Grand Central Publishing): In 1913 a Russian family escapes to New York City, and their young daughter adapts and transforms herself to the ever-changing atmosphere of twentieth-century America.
- Wherever There is Light by Peter Golden (Washington Square Press): The relationship between a German Jewish immigrant and the black American painter he falls in love with, from the 1920s through the war years.
Middle Grade Picks
- The Big Dark by Rodman Philbrick (Blue Sky Press): This dystopian novel explores the aftershocks of an anti-Semitic act of violence in a world now devoid of electricity and mechanical transportation.
- The Hired Girl by Laura Amy Schlitz (Candlewick Press): Set in 1911, a Christian farm girl takes a job as maid to a well-off Jewish family in the city of Baltimore with unexpected results.
True Stories
- An Improbable Friendship by Anthony David (Arcade Publishing): The subtitle pretty much sums this up: "The Remarkable Lives of Israeli Ruth Dayan and Palestinian Raymonda Tawil and Their Forty-Year Peace Mission."
- The House of Twenty Thousand Books by Sasha Abramsky (New York Review of Books): The story of Chimen Abramsky, a Russian-born Jew who relocated to London, ran a famous and important bookstore, and had a complicated history with the Communist Party.
World War II
- The German Girl by Armando Lucas Correa (Atria Books): A twelve-year-old girl escapes Germany for America, only to learn that she may have been duped; set in Europe, New York, and Cuba and spanning the 1930s into modern times.
- The Second Winter by Craig Larsen (Other Press): The story of a Jewish family, a Polish girl, and others trying to survive the Nazi occupation of Denmark the best way they know how.
Postwar Years
- Among the Living by Jonathan Rabb (Other Press): A Holocaust survivor emigrates to Savannah, Georgia, to move in with his only known relatives and must learn to navigate the Jim Crow South while attempting to make a new life for himself.
- City of Secrets by Stewart O'Nan (Viking): The novel focuses on the Jewish underground resistance in post-World War II Palestine in the time before the formation of the state of Israel.
A bunch of these sound good, but I really want The House of Twenty Thousand Books!
ReplyDeleteI've read two of those and would like to read six more of them. Great list!
ReplyDeleteThis is a wonderful list. There are several of these books on my TBR list and I hadn't heard of The House of Twenty Thousand Books but must read it. That is an amazing cover isn't it?
ReplyDeletewhat a good list of choices/books ... thanks!
ReplyDelete