Synopsis
Less a seminal contribution than a distillation of a wide
range of sources, this history of the Jews focuses on
their four-millennia interplay with, and adaption to,
other, often hostile, civilizationsa "world history
seen from the viewpoint of a learned and intelligent victim."
Weaving biblical and archeological data, Johnson (Modern
Times and A History of Christianity is particularly deft
at placing the patriarchs and early Israelites (the Bronze
Age through the destruction of the First Temple) in their
historical context. His dense, somewhat arbitrary, capsule
extols Judaic rational scholarshipwhich contributed to
ethical monotheism and the 18th-century economic system,
in turnand denigrates mystic kabbalah"heresy of the
most pernicious kind."
Although
Johnson, who seeks to acknowledge "the magnitude
of the debt Christianity owes to Judaism," traces
"an inherent conflict" between the religion
and the state of Israel through the various ages, the
work is incontrovertibly sympathetic to Zionism. BOMC
and QPBC featured alternates; author tour. Copyright
1987 Reed Business Information, Inc Source: Publishers
Weekly.