The Hendel Library proudly offers a year of literary delights for you to explore new Jewish titles through the National Jewish Book Council. Pop in to one, any, or all book club-like experiences. Each conversation is paired with thematic edible delicacies! Open to all WJC readers!
Please RSVP for each session at librarian@wjcenter.org
Spoiler alert: you don’t have to read the book to enjoy attending!
**Events begin at 7:45 except for June’s program, which will be held at 10:00 am.
Mothers and Other Characters: A Memoir in Essays by Nicole Graev Lipson
In this intimate and riveting memoir, essayist Lipson breaks through the ready-made stories of womanhood, rescuing truth from the fiction that infiltrates our lives…it is a love letter to our forgotten selves-and the ones we’re still becoming.
Melting Point by Rachel Cockerell
On June 7, 1907, a ship packed with Russian Jews set sail not to Jerusalem or New York, as many on board had dreamt, but to Texas. They are led by Rachel Cockerell’s great-grandfather, David Jochelmann. This is the beginning of the Galveston Plan, a forgotten moment in American history when ten thousand Jews fled to Texas in the lead-up to World War I. Cockerell weaves together diaries, letters, newspaper articles, and interviews to create a new form of non-fiction.
Sisters of Fortune by Esther Chehebar
Jane Austen’s comedy of manners followed the fortunes of the five Bennet sisters in rural England at the turn of the nineteenth century. Chehebar sets hers in the gossipy, tight-knit Syrian Jewish community in Brooklyn in the early 2000s, where the three Cohen sisters — Nina, Fortune, and Lucy — are wrestling with momentous decisions.
Long Island Compromise by Taffy Brodesser-Akner
In 1980, a wealthy businessman named Carl Fletcher was kidnapped from his driveway, brutalized, and held for ransom. He is returned to his wife and kids less than a week later, only slightly worse, and the family moved on with their lives, resuming their prized places in the saga of the American dream. But now, nearly forty years later, it’s clear that perhaps nobody ever got over anything, after all.
Heart of a Stranger: An Unlikely Rabbi’s Story of Faith, Identity, and Belonging by Rabbi Angela Buchdahl
Part memoir, part sermon collection, Heart of a Stranger tells the story of Rabbi/Cantor Angela Buchdahl. The daughter of a Korean Buddhist mother and an American Jewish father, Buchdahl traces the many twists and turns she took to find her way to becoming the Senior Rabbi of Central Synagogue, one of the most prominent and innovative Jewish communities in the United States.