Daily Life & Practice Bibliography

Bibliography: Daily Life and Practice

 

If you are seeking to build your personal Jewish library, the following are the top books about Jewish Daily Life & Practice, as recommended by the editors of MyJewishLearning.com. Click on any book's title to purchase it.

 

To go directly to a specific category, click below:

General

To Be a Jew, by Hayim Halevy Donin (Basic Books, 1972). A modern Orthodox rabbi surveys Jewish practice and belief.

 

A Guide to Jewish Religious Practice, by Isaac Klein (Jewish Theological Seminary of America, 1979). An extensive guide to Jewish law, with attention to reasons and meanings, by a prominent Conservative expert on Jewish law.

 

Gates of Mitzvah – Shaarei Mitzvah, edited by Simeon J. Maslin (Central Conference of American Rabbis Press, 1986). Although this Reform movement guide to Jewish life is largely about lifecycle events, it contains essays on mitzvot in general and on sexuality, kashrut, the single parent family and divorce, Jewish ethical wills, tzedakah, and other topics.

 

The Guide to Jewish Interfaith Family Life: An Interfaithfamily.com Handbook,

by Ronnie Friedland and Edmund Case (Jewish Lights, 2001).

 

Jewish Living: A Guide to Contemporary Reform Practice, by Mark Washofsky (Union of American Hebrew Congregations, 2001). A Reform scholar surveys the diversity of Reform practice today.

 

Jewish Family & Life: Traditions, Holidays, and Values for Today's Parents and Children, by Yosef I. Abramowitz and Susan Silverman (Golden Books, 1997).

 

Exploring Judaism: A Reconstructionist Approach (Expanded and Updated), by Rebecca T. Alpert, Jacob J. Staub (Jewish Reconstructionist Federation, 2000). Jewish life and practice from a Reconstructionist point of view.

 

The Jewish Catalogue, edited by Richard Siegel, Michael Strassfeld, and Sharon Strassfeld  (Jewish Publication Society of America, 1973), and The Second Jewish Catalog, edited by Sharon Strassfeld and Michael Strassfeld (Jewish Publication Society of America, 1976). The classic exposition of the do-it-yourself approach to being Jewish advocated by the “Jewish counter-culture” of the 1970’s. Still full of useful advice and insights.

 

To Life!: A Celebration of Jewish Thinking and Living, by Harold Kushner (Little, Brown & Co., 1993). An engaging, insightful endorsement of Jewish living by a Conservative/ Reconstructionist rabbi.  Ideas and themes, but no detailed guides to practice.

 

Jewish Wisdom: Ethical, Spiritual, and Historical Lessons from the Great Works and Thinkers, by Joseph Telushkin (William Morrow & Co., 1994). A popular anthology of Jewish wisdom from ancient times to our own times.

 

On Being a Jew, by James Kugel (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1998) A quirky but fascinating presentation of an Orthodox perspective that focuses on getting “inside” the experience of Jewish living.

 

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Shabbat

The Sabbath: Its Meaning for Modern Man, by Abraham Joshua Heschel (Noonday Press, 1996).The most recent edition of a 1951 classic, a paean to Shabbat by a major twentieth-century philosopher of Judaism.

 

Gates of Shabbat - Shaarei Shabbat : A Guide for Observing Shabbat, written and edited by Mark Dov Shapiro (Central Conference of American Rabbis Press, 1991). Shabbat as conceived and lived by Reform Jews in North America.

 

The Jewish Sabbath: A Renewed Encounter, by Pinhas Peli (Schocken Books, 1991) [original title: Shabbat Shalom]. A thematic exploration by an Israeli traditionalist thinker much influenced by Heschel. Out of print but worth tracking down in a library or used book source.

 

The Sabbath, by Samuel Dresner (United Synagogue of America, 1970). A statement of outlook and practice from an eloquent spokesman for Conservative Judaism.

 

The Sabbath: A Guide to Its Understanding and Observance, by I. Grunfeld (Feldheim, 1986).A concise statement of an Orthodox perspective on the meaning and practice of Shabbat.

 

A Shabbat Reader: Universe of Cosmic Joy, edited by Dov Peretz Elkins (Union of American Hebrew Congregations, 1999). An anthology of articles by diverse writers exploring many aspects of Shabbat observance.

 

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Kashrut: Dietary Laws

The Jewish Dietary Laws: Their Meaning for Our Time, by Samuel H. Dresner, and A Guide to Observance, by Seymour Siegel (Burning Bush Press, 1959). Brief introductions to themes and practices from a Conservative viewpoint.  Two works in one small booklet.

 

The Practical Guide to Kashruth, by S. Wasgschal (Feldheim). A slim but comprehensive guide to observance from an Orthodox perspective.

 

Why Kosher?: An Anthology of Answers, by Irving Welfeld (Jason Aronson, 1996).

A broad survey of interpretations of the dietary laws.

 

How to Keep Kosher: A Comprehensive Guide to Understanding Jewish Dietary Laws, by Lise Stern (William Morrow, 2004). An easy-to-read, transdenominational guide to kashrut, with an emphasis on the practical.

 

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Tzedakah: Charitable Giving

The Challenge of Wealth: A Jewish Perspective on Earning and Spending Money, by Meir Tamari (Jason Aronson, 1995).

 

From Charity to Social Justice: The Emergence of Communal Institutions for the Support of the Poor in Ancient Judaism, by Frank Loewenberg (Dimensions, 2001). A historical study of biblical and rabbinic tzedakah laws and institutions.

 

To Do the Right and the Good: A Jewish Approach to Modern Social Ethics, by Elliot N. Dorff (Jewish Publication Society, 2002). See especially Chapter 6, "Substantive Justice: A Jewish Approach to Poverty."

 

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Nature and Environment

Torah of the Earth: Exploring 4,000 Years of Ecology in Jewish Thought (2 volumes), ed. Arthur Waskow (Jewish Lights, 2000). A collection of articles clustered chronologically, dealing with texts and issues from the Biblical period to our own.

 

Trees, Earth, and Torah: A Tu B'Shevat Anthology, ed. Ari Elon  et al. (Jewish Publication Society, 1999). Despite the subtitle, this collection is of interest every day of the year.

 

Ecology and the Jewish Spirit: Where Nature and the Sacred Meet, ed. Ellen Bernstein (Jewish Lights, 1998). Yet another collection of thought-provoking essays.

 

Pollution in a Promised Land: An Environmental History of Israel, by Alon Tal (University of California Press, 2002). A leading Israeli environmental activist surveys Israel's environmental challenges.

 

Judaism and Ecology: Created World and Revealed World, edited by Hava Tirosh-Samuelson (Harvard U. Press, 2002). A wide-ranging anthology exploring both theory and practice.

 

The Way into Judaism and the Environment, by Jeremy Benstein (Jewish Lights, 2006). A sensitive introduction by a pioneer in Jewish environmental education.

 

 

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Prayer

The Way into Jewish Prayer, by Lawrence A. Hoffman (Jewish Lights, 2000). An engaging and informative first look at Jewish prayer. Explores major themes without exhaustive detail.

 

Entering Jewish Prayer: A Guide to Personal Devotion and the Worship Service, by Reuven A. Hammer (Schocken Books, 1994). A scholarly but sensitive introduction to Jewish prayer and survey of the traditional liturgy.

 

To Pray as a Jew, by Hayim Halevy Donin (Basic Books, 1980). A clear, detailed introduction to traditional texts and practices.

 

Jewish Worship, by Abraham Millgram (Jewish Publication Society of America, 1971;  2nd ed., 1975). This richly detailed history of Jewish liturgy is out-of-print but worth seeking out.

 

Jewish Liturgy: A Comprehensive History, by Ismar Elbogen. Transl. Raymond Scheindlin (Jewish Publication Society, 1993). The classic work of modern historical scholarship on Jewish liturgy, updated and translated.

 

My People’s Prayer Book, edited by Lawrence A. Hoffman (Jewish Lights, ten volumes so far). This multi-volume work-in-progress brings together commentary on the classical liturgy by scholars from many disciplines (Bible, history, language, law…) and ideologies. A reader should be encouraged to consult more than one edition of the Jewish prayerbook, but this unique set should be on everyone’s list.

 

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Speech

Revered by All: The Life and Works of Rabbi Israel Meir Kagan Hafetz Hayyim (1830-1933), by Lester Eckman (Shengold, 1996). A study of the modern master of Jewish speech ethics.

 

Words That Hurt, Words That Heal: How to Choose Words Wisely and Well, by Joseph Telushkin (HarperCollins, 1998). Jewish speech ethics interpreted by a talented rabbi/author.

 

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Business Ethics

Jewish Business Ethics: The Firm and Its Stakeholder, edited by Moses L. Pava and Aaron Levine (Jason Aronson, 1999).

 

The Challenge of Wealth: A Jewish Perspective on Earning and Spending Money, by Meir Tamari (Jason Aronson, 1995).

 

With All Your Possessions: Jewish Ethics and Economic Life, by Meir Tamari (Jason Aronson Publishers, 1998).

 

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The Body

Matters of Life and Death, by Elliot N. Dorff (Jewish Publication Society, 1998).

See especially Chapter 2, “Fundamental Beliefs Underlying Jewish Medical Efforts."

 

People of the Body: Jews and Judaism from an Embodied Perspective, edited by Howard Eilberg-Schwartz (State University of New York Press, 1992). An eclectic and iconoclastic anthology.

 

Illness and Health in the Jewish Tradition: Writings from the Bible to Today, edited by David L. Freeman and Judith Z. Abrams (Jewish Publication Society, 1999). An anthology about healing of body and soul.

 

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Torah Study

Back to the Sources: Reading the Classical Jewish Texts, edited by Barry Holtz (Simon and Schuster, 1986).

 

Torah With Love: A Guide for Strengthening Jewish Values Within the Family, by David Epstein and Suzanne Stutman (Simon and Schuster, 1986).

 

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