Reviews and Comments

Toddo

verdelivre@books.theunseen.city

Joined 1 year, 5 months ago

Life-long lover of reading. Fantasy & Sci-Fi were first loves. Now read a wide range of non-fiction (history, social science, philosophy, nature writing, judaica, etc.) and fiction (“literature,” mystery, queer/gay lit, etc.). My work keeps me reading constantly, but I’m hoping this site will be for my pleasure and personal reading, which has fallen off over the last 10 years.

This link opens in a pop-up window

Quatre lectures talmudiques (Paperback, French language, 1982, Editions de Minuit) No rating

I’ve been reading this bit by bit with my Chavruta over the past 7 months or so, me in French and him in English translation. We’ve bounced back and forth between the translation and the original, and I’ve worked to make ties to Levinas’s secular ethical philosophy. I was caught off guard by the end of this book, where Levinas makes a strong case for why Jews specifically, in the shadow of the Shoah, should continue to take upon themselves the burdens of others, as is demanded by Jewish ethics. Levinas reads Talmud in an innovative way, yet rooted in traditional jewish study techniques. My scholar-self is fascinated by his philosophy of reading and interpretation, and how those acts relate to Jewishness. Here, he’s addressing a specifically jewish concern of the meaning of an ancient text, the Talmud, for modern, rational Jews integrated into pluralist democracies, but in the long …

Hidden Order of Intimacy (2022, Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group) No rating

Well, Zornberg didn’t quite go in the direction I thought she would, but continues to explore the inner psychology of the blasphemer in parshat Emor. The Rabbis, as usual, had built up several competing possible biographies for the man, which Zornberg synthesizes into a view of him being an outsider, not quite Israelite, not quite a member of the Tribe. Her interpretation tries to reckon with why he would blaspheme at all and link it up to the core directive of Leviticus, to “love your neighbor.”

“…a [man] without a place in the world who, in fighting to defend [his mother’s] name and his integrity, blasphemes. He gives voice to a scream of rage. Behind the scream lie what Elizabeth Hardwick has called ‘the human collisions [of the past] that are, finally, our biographies’” (194).

Sometimes Zornberg’s psychoanalytic approach vexes me. So much Freud can feel old fashioned or fanciful, …

Butterfly Boy (Hardcover, 2006, University of Wisconsin Press) No rating

"Butterfly Boy is a coming out and coming-of-age story of a first-generation Chicano who trades …

A beautiful creative mémoire: gay, borderlands/la frontera, chicanismo, migrant labor, family, education, queer childhood. I’ve read it before and it’s among my favorite in the genre; rereading it to teach it for the first time.