The Chosen

By: Chaim Potok

“[Potok’s] description of yeshiva and college life lights a tiny fire beneath my heart.”

“[Potok] nails so much that I can only thank him for his ability to state so plainly what defined me for years. His description of yeshiva and college life lights a tiny fire beneath my heart. Even now, with my small cache of accumulated experience and distance, Potok’s explanation of Talmud as the gauge of intelligence haunts me because of its plain truth. So too with Potok’s description of the teenage and college stage struggle with ideas as opposed to people. That time in your life when a library serves up a feast and you don’t know where to begin. Where ideas enrapture, capture you, leaving you cold, frail, empty and broken, or inspired, fulfilled, dare we say uplifted and moved to think and feel more.”

Read the full essay by Joe Winkler on Jewcy.

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Chaim Potok

credit: Image Credit: waytofamous.com by Klaas Koppe

Chaim Potok (February 17, 1929 – July 23, 2002) was an American Jewish author and rabbi. Potok is most famous for his first book The Chosen, a 1967 novel which was listed on The New York Times’ best seller list for 39 weeks and sold more than 3,400,000 copies.

The Chosen won the Edward Lewis Wallant Prize and was nominated for the National Book Award. Potok wrote a sequel to The Chosen in 1969 entitled The Promise, which details the issues of the value and identity between Orthodox and Hasidic Jews. This book won the Athenaeum Literary Award the same year of its publication. Not long afterward the Jewish Publication Society appointed him as its special projects editor. In 1972, he published My Name is Asher Lev, the story of a boy struggling with his relationship with his parents, religion and his love of art. In 1975, he published In the Beginning. Potok also began translating the Hebrew Bible into English. In 1978 he published a non-fiction work, Wanderings: Chaim Potok’s Story of the Jews, a historical account of the Jews. Potok described his 1981 novel The Book of Lights as an account of his experiences in Asia during the war. He said, “it reshaped the neat, coherent model of myself and my place in the world.”

His novel The Chosen was made into a film released in 1981, which won the most prestigious award at the World Film Festival, Montreal. Potok had a cameo role as a professor. The film featured Rod Steiger, Maximilian Schell and Robby Benson. It also became a short-lived Off-Broadway musical and was adapted subsequently as a stage play by Aaron Posner in collaboration with Potok, which premiered at the Arden Theatre Company in Philadelphia in 1999.

Potok’s 1985 novel Davita’s Harp is his only book featuring a female protagonist. In 1990, he published The Gift of Asher Lev, the sequel to My Name is Asher Lev. Potok wrote many plays, among them Sins of The Father and Out of The Depths. In 1992 Potok completed another novel, I Am the Clay, about the courageous struggle of a war-ravaged family. His 1993 young adult literature The Tree of Here was followed by two others, The Sky of Now (1995) and Zebra and Other Stories (1998).

Reprinted from Wikipedia.