The Crown of Solomon and Other Stories


Cover of the book The Crown of Solomon and Other Stories by Marc D. Angel, Albion-Andalus Books
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Marc D. Angel ISBN: 9781310446818
Publisher: Albion-Andalus Books Publication: May 13, 2015
Imprint: Smashwords Edition Language: English
Author: Marc D. Angel
ISBN: 9781310446818
Publisher: Albion-Andalus Books
Publication: May 13, 2015
Imprint: Smashwords Edition
Language: English

Ever since his novel, The Search Committee, I have been waiting anxiously for Rabbi Marc D. Angel's next work of fiction. The short story collection The Crown of Solomon and Other Stories was worth the wait! A unique and moving collection that allows the reader insight into Sephardic Jewry's rich heritage." — Naomi Ragen, Author of The Sister's Weiss and the Ghost of Hannah Mendes

These wry parables of Jewish wisdom and ignorance touch a nerve. We find ourselves thinking about these characters long after we've put the book down—this one timid and self-demeaning until she suddenly is not, that one stubborn and aggressive, another, hesitant beyond reason. The stories quietly ambush assumptions of many kinds. — Jane Mushabac, CUNY Professor of English, author of "Pasha: Ruminations of David Aroughetti."

While reading Rabbi Marc Angel’s The Crown of Solomon and Other Stories, I could not stop wondering whether David Barukh, the unrecognized Sephardic Mozart, was a metaphor for the last two centuries of the Ottoman Sephardic culture, a metaphor for all the wasted opportunities and unrealized potentials! Rabbi Angel’s stories demonstrate that Sepharadim can still teach modern American readers a thing or two, a lesson in honesty, or modesty—or, maybe, how to turn a defect into effect. Rabbi Angel does not idealize his Sephardic characters, not even the rabbinic ones. Some of his rabbis, like Hakham Shelomo, are wise in an a la turca way; others are quite average, like Hakham Ezra; some are humble, honorable and even saintly like Rabbi Bejerano—and yet others are frivolous and self-centered, like Rabbi Tedeschi. All are convincingly human and quite imaginable in real life. The lay characters of the stories are simply conquering in their charming simplicity, in their human rootedness and in their folk wisdom. While reading Rabbi Marc Angel’s new book, I felt everything was in its place. It takes a person deeply rooted in both cultures, traditional Sephardic and modern American, to tell so Sephardic a story in a language such as English, and who makes everything feel totally right. — Dr. Eliezer Papo, Head of the Sephardic Studies Research Institute, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Ever since his novel, The Search Committee, I have been waiting anxiously for Rabbi Marc D. Angel's next work of fiction. The short story collection The Crown of Solomon and Other Stories was worth the wait! A unique and moving collection that allows the reader insight into Sephardic Jewry's rich heritage." — Naomi Ragen, Author of The Sister's Weiss and the Ghost of Hannah Mendes

These wry parables of Jewish wisdom and ignorance touch a nerve. We find ourselves thinking about these characters long after we've put the book down—this one timid and self-demeaning until she suddenly is not, that one stubborn and aggressive, another, hesitant beyond reason. The stories quietly ambush assumptions of many kinds. — Jane Mushabac, CUNY Professor of English, author of "Pasha: Ruminations of David Aroughetti."

While reading Rabbi Marc Angel’s The Crown of Solomon and Other Stories, I could not stop wondering whether David Barukh, the unrecognized Sephardic Mozart, was a metaphor for the last two centuries of the Ottoman Sephardic culture, a metaphor for all the wasted opportunities and unrealized potentials! Rabbi Angel’s stories demonstrate that Sepharadim can still teach modern American readers a thing or two, a lesson in honesty, or modesty—or, maybe, how to turn a defect into effect. Rabbi Angel does not idealize his Sephardic characters, not even the rabbinic ones. Some of his rabbis, like Hakham Shelomo, are wise in an a la turca way; others are quite average, like Hakham Ezra; some are humble, honorable and even saintly like Rabbi Bejerano—and yet others are frivolous and self-centered, like Rabbi Tedeschi. All are convincingly human and quite imaginable in real life. The lay characters of the stories are simply conquering in their charming simplicity, in their human rootedness and in their folk wisdom. While reading Rabbi Marc Angel’s new book, I felt everything was in its place. It takes a person deeply rooted in both cultures, traditional Sephardic and modern American, to tell so Sephardic a story in a language such as English, and who makes everything feel totally right. — Dr. Eliezer Papo, Head of the Sephardic Studies Research Institute, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

More books from Albion-Andalus Books

Cover of the book Meditations for InterSpiritual Practice: A Collection of Practices from the World's Spiritual Traditions by Marc D. Angel
Cover of the book The Garden of Mystic Love: Volume I: The Origin and Formation of the Great Sufi Orders by Marc D. Angel
Cover of the book The Risk of Sorrow: Conversations with Holocaust Survivor, Helen Handler by Marc D. Angel
Cover of the book Sufi Poetry: Prophecy and the Persian Sufi Poets by Marc D. Angel
Cover of the book His Hundred Years, A Tale by Marc D. Angel
Cover of the book Into My Garden: Rabbi Zalman Schachter-Shalomi's Legacy of Songs and Melodies: Volume I by Marc D. Angel
Cover of the book The Bowl of Saqi: A Sufi Book of Days by Marc D. Angel
Cover of the book My Love Stands Behind a Wall: A Translation of the Song of Songs and Other Poems by Marc D. Angel
Cover of the book Breaking Open the Heart by Marc D. Angel
Cover of the book A Love Note: Poetry on the Path by Marc D. Angel
Cover of the book The Looooong Narrow Pharaoh & the Midwives Who Gave Birth to Freedom by Marc D. Angel
Cover of the book Mandala: Creating an Authentic Spiritual Path: An InterSpiritual Process by Marc D. Angel
Cover of the book The Rest of Creation by Marc D. Angel
Cover of the book Dancing with a Demon by Marc D. Angel
Cover of the book Joseph and the Very First Cat by Marc D. Angel
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy