Early in his memoir, Neal Karlen confesses, "I love Judaism. It's Jews I can't stand."
What he means is that he hates the parochialism, the whole
Seinfeld of the Jews he knows from New York to Los Angeles, and he can't stand the thought of being identified as one of
them. Frustrated and embarrassed, Karlen stops looking for the Jewish enclave that fits him, and he simply rejects Judaism. And then one day, he goes too far: he marries a WASP. The marriage is doomed.
Shanda -- the Yiddish word for "shame" -- is the story of Karlen's journey back to his Jewish roots, his faith, and his own self. His guide is an unlikely one: Rabbi Manis Friedman, the renowned Hasidic scholar. With Rabbi Friedman's tutelage and friendship, Karlen rekindles his Jewish spirit and begins to ask the questions that so many modern, assimilated Jews grapple with: How do we bring meaning to our Jewish practice? Where is the line between Jewish and
too Jewish? Can you believe in Judaism even if you don't believe in God? As Karlen is led up the mountain to find these answers,
Shanda offers a stunning and illuminating view from the top.
Written with irreverent zest and poignancy, "Shanda" is Karlen's story of finding his way back to Judaism--a parable for anyone who has lost his way.
"If you like scary beginnings, Neal Karlen's memoir is the book for you...The amazing thing here is not how dramatically Karlen turns himself around but how astutely he chronicles the turnaround.
Shanda is hilarious, heartbreaking, seething, wary, and joyful -- in a word, a marvel."
-- Stephen J. Dubner, author of
Turbulent Souls and coauthor,
Freakonomics