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I repeated myself, and the librarian visibly grimaced. In this wide-ranging compilation of essays, Dara Horn, Jewish American novelist and scholar of Hebrew and Yiddish literature, critiques the morbid obsession the world has with dead Jews and the way the narratives about them are usurped for self-serving, ulterior motives.
Everyone tends to look for inspiring and universal lessons that can be learned from the countless corpses of Jews. But doing so overlooks a broader understanding to be gained from living Jews, and the vibrant traditions that have sustained Judaism over the millennia.
The shooting at the Tree of Life Synagogue in Pittsburgh—thought to be a singular stain on American soil—was followed by a synagogue shooting in San Diego, an attack on a kosher supermarket in Jersey City, and a stabbing spree at a Chanukah party in my hometown of Monsey, New York.
A year and a half after its publication, this book has yet to lose its relevance as religious Jews continue to be beaten in broad daylight on the streets of Brooklyn and celebrities spout antisemitic rhetoric that their sycophantic fans promulgate even further. The essays in People Love Dead Jews span time and space, mirroring the reality of Jews scattered across diasporic exile, with the threat of antisemitism rearing its protean, monstrous head any time and anywhere.