About the Author:
David Gelernter is professor of computer science at Yale University and contributing editor at the Weekly Standard. He is the author of several books, including Mirror Worlds, The Muse and the Machine, and the novel 1939. His writings on Judaism have appeared in Commentary and elsewhere. He lives in Woodbridge, CT.
Review:
“Out of the uncommonly learnèd and richly imagining mind of David Gelernter comes what we may be tempted to name a new Psalter; or call it instead a Song of Songs for the contemporary temperament. Yet secreted in the sinews of these seductive images is a grounded robustness of Idea. The opening chapter alone, on Separation, reveals the essential engine of human intellect: how we think. Gelernter may well be capable of sending the most adamant secularist flying to the synagogue — or, if not that, then to a principled reevaluation of the mental universe we all inhabit.”—Cynthia Ozick, author of Dictation: A Quartet
(Cynthia Ozick)
“This book not only argues its thesis, but also enacts it. Gelernter’s prose is at once plain in its patient unraveling of knotty problems and rhapsodic in its celebration of what it knows it cannot present. Judaism: A Way of Being is a powerful answer to anyone who has ever wondered how the spiritual life can be sustained in the face of all that conspires to kill it.”—Stanley Fish, author of Save the World On Your Own Time
(Stanley Fish)
“In an exhilarating work possessing the force and grace of a mighty poem, Gelernter shows us Judaism not only as a body of beliefs, but as a way of seeing and being in the world.”—Wilfred McClay, University of Tennessee
(Wilfred McClay)
“David Gelernter is a sensitive and masterfully evocative writer whose approach yields a fascinating new understanding of themes and ideas long embedded in Judaism. For writing in a way that is both true to subjective experience and compelling for Jews of the 21st century, he deserves our gratitude.—Rabbi Norman Lamm, Chancellor, Yeshiva University
(Rabbi Norman Lamm)
"One of the most original interpretations of Judaism that I have ever read. Rich with insights for Christians trying to recover their own roots in Judaism and define their own "way of being." Gelernter is especially good at showing how Judaism and Christianity go on nourishing each other, despite the vivid parting of their ways. His brief closing reflections on God, on the supreme intellectual importance of Judaism to western civilization, and on the different angles of Jewish and Christian ethics are worth the price of the book."—Michael Novak, author of On Two Wings and No One Sees God (Michael Novak)
Finalist for the 2009 Book of the Year Award, presented by ForeWord magazine (Book of the Year Award ForeWord Magazine 2010-01-01)
“The Jewish experience, as Gelernter shows, echoes profoundly across the wider experience of humanity. Judaism itself is a wide-ranging book about the beliefs, practices and philosophy of the world’s first monotheistic religion--a book that Jews and non-Jews alike will find well worth reading.”—Jay Lefkowitz, Wall Street Journal (Jay Lefkowitz Wall Street Journal 2010-03-29)
“[Gelernter] occupies a unique spot in American intellectual life, at the intersection of technology, art, politics, and religion. . . . Judaism is a visual tour of Jewish life, an attempt to conjure ‘the grand scheme’ of the Jewish religion. It is perhaps Gelernter’s most ambitious work to date.”—Evan Goldstein, The Chronicle Review (Evan Goldstein The Chronicle Review 2009-11-30)
“Though written for Jews unsatisfied by ‘usual approaches’ to Judaism, the book may fascinate non-Jews interested in its questions, too, regardless of whether they agree with Gelernter's conclusions."—Booklist (Booklist 2009-11-15)
“Exceptional . . . unlike anything that’s been done since the likes of Abraham Joshua Heschel and Mordecai Kaplan. . . . Gelernter’s brilliant book . . . [is] never less than clear and stirring, and should be read by all those who have the slightest interest in Judaism and its many layers of meaning and beauty.”—Robert Leiter, Jewish Exponent (Robert Leiter Jewish Exponent 2010-01-21)
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