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My Jesus Year: A Rabbi's Son Wanders the Bible Belt in Search of His Own Faith by Benyamin Cohen

By pereka | Posted Under Book Reviews | Comments (11)



hebrew_hammer_02.jpg

I do not generally give bad reviews about books. The worst I’ve ever written or said about a piece of literature can be summed up in that infuriatingly smug syllable “meh.” Wasn’t good enough to stick in my mind, don’t you know. Wasn’t good enough to keep its feet amongst the gods of English literature. Meh.

I’m changing that now. I’m about to give a bad review.

It became clear to me from the first few pages of My Jesus Year: A Rabbi’s Son Wanders the Bible Belt in Search of His Own Faith by Benyamin Cohen that this was going to be a chore. It wasn’t necessarily the subject matter. I’m a Jew and I like Jews. Check. I get a look into the world of megachurches and revival tents. Check. Enlightenment by the last page. Check. These are great things for a book to take my mind off of other pressing matters, right? Well, as any museum-goer will know, the artifacts can be gorgeous and heart-stirring, but they completely lose their charm when they’re displayed on top of an over-turned cardboard box and lit by a homeless man holding a flashlight.

What I’m trying to say is that Cohen’s writing style and personality made me want to wring his neck. Where there should be humor, there are nudge-nudge-wink-wink pop culture references. Where there should be actual insight into his spiritual journey, there is whining. And, oh G-d, the whining.

Mr. Cohen, listen, that skinny asthmatic Jew thing is all played out. It died once Israel got an army, Lenny Krayzelburg won gold, and the Hebrew Hammer kicked some ass. You’re not Woody Allen — you’re barely a Woody Allen wannabe. Sure, you didn’t choose to become an Orthodox Jew, but last time I checked, none of us had a sign up sheet in the womb. I’m sorry that your mother died when you were young, but you should be thanking your lucky stars that you had a family that loved you, clothed you, and fed you. You know how many people have less than that?

What kills me here is that I agree with many of his assessments of his time in the Christian world. Of course it’s disturbing as all hell when you find Christians wearing the Star of David. Yes, a Sunday mass can be an incredibly uplifting experience. And, absolutely, gospel can elevate a service in any religion. There is so much to be gathered from gentiles, so much to learn that can give us a perspective on our own faith. However, calling someone the Michael Jordon of faith or constantly harping on your own spindly little body is tiresome.

People, if you want to read a humorous book about religion, read A.J. Jacobs’ The Year of Living Biblically: One Man’s Humble Quest to Follow the Bible as Literally as Possible (why are these titles always so long?). If you want a fish out of water book, pick up Them: Adventures With Extremists by Jon Ronson. The Jesus Year, as much as I wanted to like it, is a sad waste of cellulose.

This review is part of the Cannonball Read series. For more of pereka’s reviews, check out her blog, Writing in Wax.









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Comments

Damn you Pereka. You give a bad review of a book and then mention just enough intruiging stuff to make me want to read it. You are the Grizzly Man tape equivalent of a book review.

One minor comment: if he was in the actual Bible Belt he can't have been going to many Masses. Those people don't do Catholic.

Posted by: PaddyDog at June 30, 2010 10:09 AM

Paddy, we have churches of all kinds down here, I promise! Catholics included.

Posted by: ZombieNurse at June 30, 2010 10:19 AM

I think bad reviews are almost more important than the good. If you were thinking of wringing his neck? I would be locked up. Thanks for the save.

Posted by: karen at June 30, 2010 10:19 AM

I get what you're saying, but I would totally go to a museum curated by hobos. That would be the best museum ever.

I hate books like this - written by people with interesting stories to tell, but who don't have the capacity to tell them well. Glad you got there first so I can skip it.

Posted by: Marra at June 30, 2010 10:20 AM

I didn't like this book at all either. Daniel Radosh's Rapture Ready is a MUCH better book on this topic.

Posted by: Becky at June 30, 2010 10:40 AM

Nice review! I loved AJ Jacobs as well. And thanks for the tip - now I'll have to give Them a try as well.

Posted by: dsbs at June 30, 2010 11:14 AM

"Hobo-curated museum" is something that needs to be worked into more conversations.

Posted by: Sara at June 30, 2010 12:39 PM

Derailing the thread: has anyone watched the Hebrew Hammer?

I was tempted by the DVD box in my rental place for about a year but never took it home. Did I miss a good silly cult classic?

Posted by: idiosynchronic at June 30, 2010 2:10 PM

Mr. Cohen, listen, that skinny asthmatic Jew thing is all played out. It died once Israel got an army, Lenny Krayzelburg won gold, and the Hebrew Hammer kicked some ass. YEAH BABY!

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