Jewish voices have shaped literature—turning history into testimony, trauma into art, and identity into something unforgettable. But celebrating #WorldBookDay as a Jewish community carries even deeper meaning.
For centuries, our books have been burned, banned, and silenced. Our response? We keep telling our stories. We refuse to be erased.
Here are a few Jewish authors that I have focused on today:
Franz Kafka – Gave us Kafkaesque nightmares of alienation and absurdity (The Metamorphosis, The Trial).
Philip Roth – Provocative, unfiltered, and deeply Jewish (Portnoy’s Complaint, The Plot Against America).
Elie Wiesel – A Holocaust survivor who made the world remember (Night).
Art Spiegelman – Revolutionized literature with Maus, the first graphic novel to win a Pulitzer Prize.
Saul Bellow – Nobel Prize-winning giant of Jewish-American literature (Herzog, The Adventures of Augie March).
Rebecca Walker – Explored Black and Jewish identity in Black, White, and Jewish.
David Baddiel – Exposed modern antisemitism and Jewish exclusion in Jews Don’t Count.
Sara Glass – Redefined queer Jewish storytelling with Kissing Girls on Shabbat.
Books are survival. Books are resistance. Books are identity.
Tell me your favorite Jewish author in the comments! ⬇️📚
#thetruthaboutjudaismproject #JewishPride #NeverAgain #BooksNotBurning #Maus #JewsDontCount #KissingGirlsOnShabbat #JewishAuthors #QueerJewishStories #RepresentationMatters #LChaim
#thetruthaboutjudaism #jewish #judaism #antisemetism #israel #jewishhistory #jewishroots #jewishcommunity #jewishidentity #TikkunOlam #JewishPride #LChaim #JewishCulture
#Shalom #JewishValues #education #worldbookday2025 #lgbt

