How the Talmud Can Change Your Life: Surprisingly Modern Advice from a Very Old Book
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- 15,99 €
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- 15,99 €
Descripción editorial
A witty and wide-ranging exploration of a book that has perplexed and delighted people for centuries: the Talmud.
For numerous centuries, the Talmud—an extraordinary work of Jewish ethics, law, and tradition—has compelled readers to grapple with how to live a good life. Full of folk legends, bawdy tales, and rabbinical repartee, it is inspiring, demanding, confounding, and thousands of pages long. As Liel Leibovitz enthusiastically explores the Talmud, what has sometimes been misunderstood as a dusty and arcane volume becomes humanity’s first self-help book. How the Talmud Can Change Your Life contains sage advice on an unparalleled scope of topics, which includes communicating with your partner, dealing with grief, and being a friend.
Leibovitz guides readers through the sprawling text with all its humor, rich insights, compulsively readable stories, and multilayered conversations. Contemporary discussions framed by Talmudic philosophy and psychology draw on subjects ranging from Weight Watchers and the Dewey decimal system to the lives of Billie Holiday and C. S. Lewis. Chapters focus on fundamental human experiences—the mind-body problem, the power of community, the challenges of love—to illuminate how the Talmud speaks to our daily existence. As Leibovitz explores some of life’s greatest questions, he also delivers a concise history of the Talmud itself, explaining the process of its lengthy compilation and organization.
With infectious passion and candor, Leibovitz brilliantly displays how the Talmud’s wisdom reverberates for the modern age and how it can, indeed, change your life.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In this stellar outing, journalist Leibovitz (Stan Lee) elucidates how ancient rabbinic debates remain relevant to modern meaning-seekers. While the adjective "talmudic" is often synonymous with "abstruse" or "hair-splitting," Leibovitz argues that the Talmud itself interrogates "larger questions of what, if anything, this life is about," tackling such evergreen topics as "how to love, how to grieve, how to fight, how to be a better spouse, how to fix the government," without moralizing or leaning on cut-and-dried answers. According to the author, this embrace of complexity helps to explain the text's enduring relevance (and even its current cachet among some non-Jews): its inclusion of vigorous dissents and willingness to leave certain questions unresolved illustrates that no one has a monopoly on wisdom and that tolerance of different opinions is essential. Leibovitz adroitly brings in contemporary anecdotes to broach big-picture talmudic themes; a discussion of Weight Watchers founder Jean Slutsky, who struggled with overeating until she discovered the importance of "bring the body and mind into alignment," for example, ties into fascinating rabbinic explorations of how to "live with and live in the human body." Meticulously analyzed and surprisingly accessible, this is a worthy complement to Jonathan Rosen's The Talmud and the Internet.