One of the rules in our family is that you aren’t allowed to watch a movie based on a book until you have read the book first. As such, I’m ashamed to admit that I haven’t read the book Holes, by Louis Sachar, but I did see the movie (years ago), which was great. However,…
Category: Monday Morning Reading
Best Team Ever: The Surprising Science of High Performing Teams – David Burkus
I must admit that the title Best Team Ever, by David Burkus, sounds more like a book for middle school kids than professionals. Once you add the subtitle, The Surprising Science of High Performing Teams, it does work a bit better. That said, it’s quite a good guide for how teams can maximize their work…
Talking Sense by Barry Jentz
There are two experiences in my life that have helped me see how difficult communication can be. One is marriage, and the second is school leadership. No matter how clear I think I’m being when I speak or write (and anyone who’s sent an email to our parent community knows this is true), it’s never…
Goodbye, Eastern Europe: An Intimate History of a Divided Land – Jacob Mikanowski
I was completely enthralled by Jacob Mikanowski’s interview on the podcast Conversations With Tyler, which I recommended some months back. So, of course, I bought his book! Goodbye, Eastern Europe: An Intimate History of a Divided Land is an expansive look at Eastern Europe from a person who has spent most of his adult life…
Exhalation by Michael Chiang
There are some books that I fall into, where the story draws me and I feel emotionally connected to the narrative. Exhalation, by Michael Chiang, was of a different sort. More than almost any other work of fiction I can remember, it was intellectually challenging, not in the sense of being hard to read, but…
Going Infinite: The Rise and Fall of a New Tycoon, Michael Lewis
I’m a long time fan of Michael Lewis, and so was eager to read his new book about Sam Bankman-Fried (SBF), Going Infinite: The Rise and Fall of a New Tycoon. Like many of Lewis’ books, being uninterested in the subject matter he addresses (baseball, finance, organizational psychology, crypto currency) is no impediment to reading…
Rachel Aviv – Strangers to Ourselves: Unsettled Minds and the Stories That Make Us
There is a common dichotomy presented in the world of mental illness. On one side (and I simplify), evolving from Freud’s early influence on psychology, is that mental illness emerges from deep human drives combined with early life experiences. Its solution lies in talk therapy and self awareness. On the other side,…
The Yom Kippur War: The Epic Encounter That Transformed the Middle East, Abraham Rabinovich
I was recently gifted a copy of The Yom Kippur War: The Epic Encounter That Transformed the Middle East, by Abraham Rabinovich, an exceptional and gripping book. I actually started it as a side-book, but it quickly became the center of my reading attention. Reading it soon after the events of October 7th was especially…
Reading With My Kids – December Wrap Up
With the winter break coming up and more time with your kids, I thought a wrap up of my recent reading with my children might be helpful (and hopefully fun as well!). Most of what I’ve read these last few months has been with my son Koby in Grade 3, because Simi and I (Grade…
Avigayil Rock – פרשני המקרא
Amongst my most recommended books of this past year is פרשני המקרא, by Avigayil Rock z’l, (it has been translated into English under the title Great Biblical Commentators). It is an extraordinary, encyclopedic panorama of biblical commentary starting with Onkelos’s Arameic translation, through the middle ages, and into modern times. Each of the 25 chapters…