…offers deep pleasures…Mr. Schama's The Story of the Jews, is exemplary popular history. It's engaged, literate, alert to recent scholarship and, at moments, winningly personal.
The New York Times - Dwight Garner
★ 01/13/2014 Award-winning Columbia Univ. historian Schama, NBCC Award winner for Rough Crossings: Britain, the Slaves and the American Revolution, brings to bear his gift for synthesizing mountains of information into a well-crafted, accessible narrative in this impressive volume that spans nearly 2,500 years and serves as a companion volume to a PBS series. His aim is to incorporate the telling details that make the past, and its people, live and breathe for a modern audience—“the prosaic along with the poetic: a doodle on a child’s Hebrew exercise page from medieval Cairo; battling cats and mice on a sumptuously illustrated Bible from Spain... the aggravation of an NCO sweating it out on a hilltop fort while the Babylonians are closing in.” He opens with a Jewish soldier on Elephantine in 475 B.C.E., known from a letter sent by his father, discovered again after two-and a-half millennia, and continues through the expulsion of the Jews from Portugal. Throughout, Schama offers cogent arguments for the credibility of numerous sources, including the controversial Josephus, and supports the notion advanced by Rabbi Gershon Cohen that assimilation had its benefits, by stimulating growth and creativity for the Jews. Maps & Illus. Agents: Michael Sissons & Caroline Michel; Peters, Fraser & Dunlop (U.K.) (Mar.)
Award-winning Columbia University historian Schama . . . brings to bear his gift for synthesizing mountains of information into a well-crafted, accessible narrative in this impressive volume that spans nearly 2,500 years and serves as a companion volume to a PBS series.” — Publishers Weekly (starred review)
“A multifaceted story artfully woven by an expert historian.” — Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
“Schama has written an unconventional but masterful and deeply felt history of his people…” — Booklist (starred review)
“Mr. Schama’s The Story of the Jews is exemplary popular history. It’s engaged, literate, alert to recent scholarship and, at moments, winningly personal.” — New York Times
“In his brilliant new history of the Jews, the unconventional scholar somehow manages to be simultaneously sentimental and subversive, consensual and contrarian - and we readers are the beneficiaries.” — Haaretz (English edition)
“Mr. Schama’s history flashes by with entertaining velocity…” — Wall Street Journal
“An energetic cascade of prose and erudition, rife with pointillist detail and witty colloquialisms…” — Chicago Tribune, Printers Row
“Schama writes history from below, and from the middle and other unexpected angles, resurrecting the unrecorded and long-forgotten, and analyzing the social and cultural forces that shaped his subjects’ lives… [he] has pulled it off with opinionated flair and literary grace.” — New York Times Book Review
“Stirring and fascinating” — Los Angeles Times
“Schama is a historian of prodigious and varied gifts. He can take a specific subject and drill deep; he can take a wide-angled view of many countries over long periods of time. He does both in this excellent first volume… Revealing and moving.” — San Francisco Chronicle
“Reading Schama is like sitting across from the world’s most dazzling dinner party guest…” — Seattle Times
“The story that Schama tells is wide-ranging, well documented, delightful, amusing, personal, and inspring…” — New York Review of Books
Schama writes history from below, and from the middle and other unexpected angles, resurrecting the unrecorded and long-forgotten, and analyzing the social and cultural forces that shaped his subjects’ lives… [he] has pulled it off with opinionated flair and literary grace.
New York Times Book Review
Stirring and fascinating
Schama is a historian of prodigious and varied gifts. He can take a specific subject and drill deep; he can take a wide-angled view of many countries over long periods of time. He does both in this excellent first volume… Revealing and moving.
Mr. Schama’s The Story of the Jews is exemplary popular history. It’s engaged, literate, alert to recent scholarship and, at moments, winningly personal.
Mr. Schama’s history flashes by with entertaining velocity…
In his brilliant new history of the Jews, the unconventional scholar somehow manages to be simultaneously sentimental and subversive, consensual and contrarian - and we readers are the beneficiaries.
Haaretz (English edition)
An energetic cascade of prose and erudition, rife with pointillist detail and witty colloquialisms…
Schama has written an unconventional but masterful and deeply felt history of his people…
Booklist (starred review)
Mr. Schama’s history flashes by with entertaining velocity…
Schama is a historian of prodigious and varied gifts. He can take a specific subject and drill deep; he can take a wide-angled view of many countries over long periods of time. He does both in this excellent first volume… Revealing and moving.
Stirring and fascinating
Reading Schama is like sitting across from the world’s most dazzling dinner party guest…
The story that Schama tells is wide-ranging, well documented, delightful, amusing, personal, and inspring…
An energetic cascade of prose and erudition, rife with pointillist detail and witty colloquialisms…
03/15/2014 Schama (art history & history, Columbia Univ.; The American Future: A History) presented a five-part BBC series of the same title last year, with this book published in the UK to be "organically interconnected" with the series. It is the first of a projected two volumes. (PBS will air the series beginning in late March.) Schama turns his attention to a topic that resonates with his own heritage, at once celebrating a rich and distinct religious history while also embracing the idea that Jews often lived side by side with other cultures and were to some extent integrated into them. He argues that "it was possible to be Jewish and Egyptian, just as later it would be possible to be Jewish and Dutch or Jewish and American." Schama's emphasis on acculturation is highlighted in his discussions of Jewish art, society, and even their religious practices having been influenced by cultures around them. Equally, he offers cases in which Jews were persecuted by neighbors as in Blois, France (1171 CE), and in forced conversions and mob rampages in Toledo, Spain, during the 1300s. The book ends with Spain's expulsion of the Jews in 1492. While Schama more than makes his case about cultural influences and immersion, the occasional pauses as he focuses intensely on the minutiae of a particular topic make his tempo uneven, a pattern that is made more challenging by his jumps back and forth in time. VERDICT Perhaps too cumbersome to absorb for a neophyte of Jewish history, the book (BBC/PBS series and illustrations not seen) is recommended for serious readers who would like a new interpretation of a well-covered subject.—Crystal Goldman, San Jose State Univ. Lib., CA
★ 2014-01-20 Witty, nimble and completely in his element, Schama (History and Art History/Columbia Univ.; Scribble, Scribble, Scribble: Writing on Politics, Ice Cream, Churchill, and My Mother , 2011, etc.), in a book tie-in to a PBS and BBC series, fashions a long-planned "labor of love" that nicely dovetails the biblical account with the archaeological record. Indeed, as this densely written effort accompanies the visual story, the author fixes on a tangible element (such as papyrus, shard or document) in each chapter as a point of departure in advancing the early history of the Jews. For example, a missive in papyrus by a father to his missionary son from an island in the Upper Nile circa 475 B.C. illustrates the thriving expat Jewish community in Egypt, despite the dire "perdition" narrative about Egypt being written at the same time by the first Hebrew sages in Judea and Babylon. The remains of early synagogues in Hellenized Cyrenaica and elsewhere, built in a classical Greek temple style, with graphic mosaics, reveal how the Jews were intimately situated in their crossover surroundings. The inscriptions and excavations at Zafar (in present-day Yemen) attest to the Judaic conversion of the Kingdom of Himyar in the late fourth century, evidence that "the Jews were far from a tenuous, alien presence amid the ethnically Arab world of the Hijaz and the Himyar." In the long litany of persecution and suppression, climaxing but scarcely ceasing with the destruction of the Second Temple in A.D. 70, the Jews had to scatter, taking their words with them, and the Torah was later enriched by the "picayune" codifications of the Mishnah and Talmud, all as a way "to rebuild Jerusalem in the imagination and memory." Schama is relentless in faulting the break between Christianity and Judaism as the spur to the subsequent phobia against the "pariah tribe." A multifaceted story artfully woven by an expert historian.