Tag Archives: A Jewish Appendix

‘A Jewish Appendix’ events this week

This past week, I was interviewed about A Jewish Appendix by Yonat Shimron of Religion News Service. I really enjoyed this conversation, which was tied to Passover and the ideas of exodus, emigration, and self-reinvention.

If you live in the Triangle area of North Carolina, please come to my reading this Thursday, April 17 at Flyleaf Books in Chapel Hill! This event will include a post-reading conversation with Rabbi Hannah Bender of Durham’s Judea Reform congregation. I’m looking forward not only to talking about A Jewish Appendix with Rabbi Bender and the public, but also to a wider discussion of Jewish life, culture, and identity.

And a happy Passover to all!

‘A Jewish Appendix’ in the news & the world

My new book, A Jewish Appendix, will be published on March 15, 2025, by Spuyten Duyvil Publishing. A Jewish Appendix is a memoir and travel adventure, a story of epigenetic inheritance, a search for home and belonging, and a reckoning with the power and paradox of Jewish identity. It’s an exploration of roots, and it’s for anyone who has ever explored their own. You can read more about A Jewish Appendix here, and preorder it here.

Advance praise for my book:

Mark Oppenheimer, author of Squirrel Hill: The Tree of Life Synagogue Shooting and the Soul of a Neighborhood, calls A Jewish Appendix “unique, thrilling, and epically weird, in the very best sense.” Sam Stephenson, author of Gene Smith’s Sink: A Wide-Angle View, calls my memoir “unusual, understated, and brilliant […] a journey into geographic roots of [the author]’s family tree overseas and the inner evidence of his own past,” and “the most variable and memorable use of the metaphor of the appendix since Brian Eno’s A Year with Swollen Appendices.”