NPR has produced a special Hanukkah program every year since 1990, reading aloud or voice-acting short stories based on the Hanukkah season. In this volume and accompanying CD, these stories are gathered in one package: Twelve short stories are printed and four recorded on the CD. The stories, some commissioned specifically for the program, are varied in structure, tone, and adherence to tradition. Harlan Ellison’s “Go Toward the Lights,” a science-fiction tale, puts forth a novel explanation for the miracle of the long-lasting oil; Dani Shapiro’s “Oil and Water” shows some more modern miracles of Hanukkah; Mark Helprin recollects his dislike of Hanukkah as a child, and his reasons for it, and then remembers making his peace with the holiday. These stories are not aimed at children and are not, for the most part, suitable for them. While some pieces are fairly traditional, others are likely to perturb more religious readers — Ariel Dorfman’s “A Candle for Kerala,” one of the recorded stories, celebrates Hanukkah as the season in which a character finds his non-Jewish, ‘not planning to convert’, Indian love, and Max Apple’s “Stabbing an Elephant” shows a rabbi threatened with expulsion from his pulpit if he does not proclaim the famous story of Eleazar killing a Greek elephant false. His decision to bow to such pressure may disappoint some readers. The four recorded stories are performed extremely well, with strong characterizations and excellent expression. Some of the better known authors in this volume, such as Kinky Friedman and Leslea Newman, contribute stories that fall very clearly into their usual territory.
Nonfiction
Hanukkah Lights
- Review
By
– July 30, 2012
Sharona S. Vedol is an Acquisitions Editor at Academic Studies Press and was formerly an Associate at the Jewish Book Council. She is also a freelance writer.
Discussion Questions
Jewish literature inspires, enriches, and educates the community.
Help support the Jewish Book Council.