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The Five Books: Jewish Authors on the Books That Shaped Them

Tali Rosenblatt Cohen
The Five Books: Jewish Authors on the Books That Shaped Them
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59 episodes

  • The Five Books: Jewish Authors on the Books That Shaped Them

    Portia Elan on the Future We Choose

    2026-07-07 | 51 mins.
    Portia Elan tells us about her journey to become a Jew by choice after attending Friday night services and feeling that she had “come home.” We also discuss her fascination with the AIDS quilt as a child, and the beauty in finding queer elders in her synagogue. Portia also reflects on how she understands tikkun olam: rooted in how we care for others and in our responsibility to the balance of entire ecosystems.

    Portia Elan studied history at Stanford University and earned an MFA from the University of Victoria before returning to California, where she has worked as a waitress, bookseller, teacher, and public librarian. She is a former Lambda Literary Fellow and lives in the San Francisco Bay Area with her wife and an abundance of cats. Homebound, Portia’s debut novel, is a clear-eyed, hopeful work of speculative fiction about humanity’s future and capacity for love. 

    Homebound is a GMA Book Club pick and the latest selection for Nu Reads, the curated, bi-monthly book subscription service from Jewish Book Council.

    Homebound Portia Elan’s  Five Books:


    Surprised by God by Danya Ruttenberg


    The History of Love by Nicole Krauss


    Cannery Row by John Steinbeck


    The Encore by Juliet Izon


    HOMEBOUND by Portia Elan

    Other Episodes You Might Enjoy:


    Alicia Jo Rabins on Composing a Life of Meaning


    Yael van der Wouden on Rage, Desire, and Magic


    Rabbi Sharon Brous on Finding Her Place in the Jewish Community

    Other Books Mentioned:


    The Sabbath by Abraham Joshua Heschel 


    When the Emperor Was Divine and The Swimmers by Julie Otsuka 

    The Five Books is a podcast that celebrates the role of books in Jewish culture. Through author interviews, we delve into Jewish identity and discover each author’s favorite novels. Join us every week for new Jewish book recommendations! Some of our episodes have included conversations with Rabbi Sharon Brous, Sam Sussman, Rabbi Angela Buchdahl and Allegra Goodman.

    ⁠⁠⁠Sign up for our newsletter⁠⁠⁠ to get new episode reminders, authors’ five book picks, and more delivered straight to your inbox.

    Find us on Instagram ⁠@fivebookspod ⁠or on Facebook at The Five Books Podcast.

    For feedback or author recommendations please email us at ⁠team@fivebookspod.org⁠

    For transcripts and more find us online at ⁠www.fivebookspod.org ⁠

    The Five Books has the advisory and promotional support of the Jewish Book Council. Jewish Book Council is a nonprofit dedicated to amplifying and celebrating Jewish literature and supporting authors and readers. Stay up to date on the latest in Jewish literature! ⁠https://www.jewishbookcouncil.org/events/celebrate⁠

    The Five Books is fiscally sponsored by FJC, a 501c3 public charity. 

    Hosted by Tali Rosenblatt Cohen

    Produced by Odelia Rubin

    Editorial and website support by Amelia Merrill

    Artwork by Elad Lifshitz of the Dov Abramson Studio

    Music by Dov Rosenblatt and Blue Dot Sessions
  • The Five Books: Jewish Authors on the Books That Shaped Them

    Dahlia Adler on Writing a Spicy Modern Orthodox Romance

    2026-06-23 | 50 mins.
    In this conversation, Dahlia Adler discusses the emotional and cultural terrain of love, identity, and storytelling within and beyond the Modern Orthodox world. We explore the particular pressures and expectations around romance in a community where shared values, observance, and belief are foundational. Dahlia also reflects on her unexpected journey to understanding her own bisexual identity as a result of writing a sapphic romance. And we explore her deep love of flawed characters - from Biblical women, to her own protagonists and her commitment to rendering them with empathy, context and moral complexity.

    Dahlia Adler is an award-winning author of romance novels for both teens and adults, a prolific YA anthologist, and the founder of the website LGBTQReads. Her novels include the Kids' Indie Next picks Cool for the Summer, Home Field Advantage, and Going Bicoastal, a Sydney Taylor Honor book. She lives in the New York City suburbs with her family.  

    Dahlia’s latest novel, Soon By You, is a rom-com set in the Modern Orthodox community on the Upper West Side. 

    Dahlia Adler’s Five Books:

    1. Alan and Naomi by Myron Levoy

    2. Playing with Matches by Suri Rosen

    3. Biblical Images: Men and Women of the Bible by Adin Steinsaltz

    4. Sisters of Fortune by Esther Chehebar

    5. Soon By You by Dahlia Adler

    Other Media Mentioned:

    - LGBTQReads

    - Unorthodox Love by Heidi Shertok

    Other Episodes You Might Enjoy:


    Esther Chehebar on Marriage, Sisterhood, and the Weight of Tradition


    Jean Meltzer on ‘Jewitches’ and Jewish Joy


    Jessica Elisheva Emerson on Belief, Identity, and Women’s Desire


    Jennifer Weiner on “Women’s Fiction”

    The Five Books is a podcast that celebrates the role of books in Jewish culture. Through author interviews, we delve into Jewish identity and discover each author’s favorite novels. Join us every week for new Jewish book recommendations! Some of our episodes have included conversations with Rabbi Sharon Brous, Sam Sussman, Rabbi Angela Buchdahl and Allegra Goodman.

    ⁠⁠⁠Sign up for our newsletter⁠⁠⁠ to get new episode reminders, authors’ five book picks, and more delivered straight to your inbox.

    Find us on Instagram ⁠@fivebookspod ⁠or on Facebook at The Five Books Podcast.

    For feedback or author recommendations please email us at ⁠team@fivebookspod.org⁠

    For transcripts and more find us online at ⁠www.fivebookspod.org ⁠

    The Five Books has the advisory and promotional support of the Jewish Book Council. Jewish Book Council is a nonprofit dedicated to amplifying and celebrating Jewish literature and supporting authors and readers. Stay up to date on the latest in Jewish literature! ⁠https://www.jewishbookcouncil.org/events/celebrate⁠

    The Five Books is fiscally sponsored by FJC, a 501c3 public charity. 

    Hosted by Tali Rosenblatt Cohen

    Produced by Odelia Rubin

    Editorial and website support by Amelia Merrill

    Artwork by Elad Lifshitz of the Dov Abramson Studio

    Music by Dov Rosenblatt and Blue Dot Sessions
  • The Five Books: Jewish Authors on the Books That Shaped Them

    Laurie Frankel on the Jewish Ability to Hold Multiple Truths

    2026-06-09 | 54 mins.
    Is two Jews, three opinions a good thing? In this episode, Laurie Frankel discusses the very Jewish capacity of holding space for many different ideas and views, and how this capacity might be exactly what we need in this moment. We’ll also discuss the power and devastation of Cythnia Ozick’s short story “The Shawl,” its contribution to the conversation around trauma, and how a difficult-to-believe premise followed by realism (like that in Naomi Alderman’s The Power) is one of Laurie’s favorite structures for fiction. 

    Laurie Frankel is the New York Times bestselling, award-winning author of six novels. Her writing has also appeared in The New York Times, The Guardian, The Washington Post, Poets & Writers, Publisher’s Weekly, People Magazine, Lit Hub, The Sydney Morning Herald, and more. She is the recipient of the Washington State Book Award and the Endeavor Award. A proponent of transgender rights, she wrote about her child’s transition in an essay in the New York Times titled, “From He to She in First Grade.” Her novel This Is How It Always Is, also about a transgender child, was a Reese’s Book Club Pick and was listed as one of the best books of 2017 by People Magazine, Bustle, and more.

    Laurie’s latest novel is Enormous Wings. At seventy-seven, Pepper Mills is too old to be a stranger in a strange land. She didn’t choose the Vista View Retirement Community of Austin, Texas—that would be her three grown children—but when she grudgingly moves in, she not only makes new friends, she falls in love. Then the exhaustion, vomiting, and confusion start. She fears it’s cancer, dementia, a stroke. But a raft of tests later, the news is even more shocking: She’s pregnant. As word gets out, everyone wants a piece of her: the press and paparazzi, activists and medical researchers, belly-rubbers and rubber-neckers all descending on Vista View while Pepper struggles to determine her next move. Soon she has some hard decisions to make—and some she’s not allowed to make.

    Laurie Frankel’s Five Books:

    1. The Shawl and Rosa, interconnected short stories by Cynthia Ozick

    2. Angels in America, a play by Tony Kushner 

    3. The Power by Naomi Alderman

    4. The Beheading Game by Rebecca Lehmann 

    5. Enormous Wings by Laurie Frankel

    Other Episodes You Might Enjoy:


    Fran Fabriczki on “Homelooseness” and a Love Letter to Los Angeles


    Judith Viorst on Happiness, Agency, and the Art of Aging


    Kitty Zeldis on Passing and the Relief of Being “Kitty”


    Gayle Forman on the Innate Goodness of Young People

    The Five Books is a podcast that celebrates the role of books in Jewish culture. Through author interviews, we delve into Jewish identity and discover each author’s favorite novels. Join us every week for new Jewish book recommendations! Some of our episodes have included conversations with Rabbi Sharon Brous, Sam Sussman, Rabbi Angela Buchdahl and Allegra Goodman.

    ⁠⁠⁠Sign up for our newsletter⁠⁠⁠ to get new episode reminders, authors’ five book picks, and more delivered straight to your inbox.

    Find us on Instagram ⁠@fivebookspod ⁠or on Facebook at The Five Books Podcast.

    For feedback or author recommendations please email us at ⁠team@fivebookspod.org⁠

    For transcripts and more find us online at ⁠www.fivebookspod.org ⁠

    The Five Books has the advisory and promotional support of the Jewish Book Council. Jewish Book Council is a nonprofit dedicated to amplifying and celebrating Jewish literature and supporting authors and readers. Stay up to date on the latest in Jewish literature! ⁠https://www.jewishbookcouncil.org/events/celebrate⁠

    The Five Books is fiscally sponsored by FJC, a 501c3 public charity. 

    Hosted by Tali Rosenblatt Cohen

    Produced by Odelia Rubin

    Editorial and website support by Amelia Merrill

    Artwork by Elad Lifshitz of the Dov Abramson Studio

    Music by Dov Rosenblatt and Blue Dot Sessions
  • The Five Books: Jewish Authors on the Books That Shaped Them

    Nicholas Lemann on Being Jewish in the Shadow of the American South

    2026-05-26 | 1h 7 mins.
    In recognition of Jewish Heritage Month, this episode features a conversation with Nicholas Lemann, whose work and life story open up questions about American and Jewish identity. Nicholas discusses his assimilated Louisianan/ German-Jewish upbringing and his lifelong quest for connection with Judaism. What does it mean to be both Jewish and have ancestors who benefitted from slavery? We’ll also discuss what Tolstoy’s Russia has in common with the New Orleans of Nicholas’ childhood, and his appreciation for reading the Torah in all its moral complexity. 

    Nicholas was born and raised in New Orleans and has been a magazine writer since he was a teenager. He has worked at the Washington Monthly, Texas Monthly, the Washington Post, The Atlantic Monthly, and has been a staff writer at the New Yorker since 1999. He is a professor and dean emeritus at the Columbia Journalism school, and in 2023 was appointed to Columbia’s Task Force on Antisemitism.

    Nicholas is also the author of many books of nonfiction including The Promised Land: The Great Black Migration and How It Changed America, The Big Test: The Secret History of the American Meritocracy, and Transaction Man: The Rise of the Deal and the Decline of the American Dream.  His latest book is Returning: A Search for Home Across Three Centuries. delves deeply into his family’s German-Jewish-Lousianan story. From their arrival in Louisiana in the 1830s as peddlers from Germany, to their becoming plantation owners and department store owners after the Civil War, to their emergence in the aristocratic world of New Orleans, where they could never quite belong. 

    Nicholas Lemann’s Five Books:

    1. My Son the Nut by Allan Sherman (album)

    2. How Judaism Became a Religion by Leora Batnitzky

    3. War and Peace by Leo Tolstoy

    4. The Radetzky March by Joseph Roth

    5. Returning: A Search for Home Across Three Centuries by Nicholas Lemann

    Other Episodes You Might Enjoy:


    Rachel Cockerell on the Zionist Dream that Sailed to Galveston


    Matti Friedman on the Stories that Built a People


    Elizabeth Graver on Lost Worlds and New Doorways


    Francine Klagsbrun on Embracing and Reshaping Tradition

    The Five Books is a podcast that celebrates the role of books in Jewish culture. Through author interviews, we delve into Jewish identity and discover each author’s favorite novels. Join us every week for new Jewish book recommendations! Some of our episodes have included conversations with Rabbi Sharon Brous, Sam Sussman, Rabbi Angela Buchdahl and Allegra Goodman.

    ⁠⁠⁠Sign up for our newsletter⁠⁠⁠ to get new episode reminders, authors’ five book picks, and more delivered straight to your inbox.

    Find us on Instagram ⁠@fivebookspod ⁠or on Facebook at The Five Books Podcast.

    For feedback or author recommendations please email us at ⁠team@fivebookspod.org⁠

    For transcripts and more find us online at ⁠www.fivebookspod.org ⁠

    The Five Books has the advisory and promotional support of the Jewish Book Council. Jewish Book Council is a nonprofit dedicated to amplifying and celebrating Jewish literature and supporting authors and readers. Stay up to date on the latest in Jewish literature! ⁠https://www.jewishbookcouncil.org/events/celebrate⁠

    The Five Books is fiscally sponsored by FJC, a 501c3 public charity. 

    Hosted by Tali Rosenblatt Cohen

    Produced by Odelia Rubin

    Editorial and website support by Amelia Merrill

    Artwork by Elad Lifshitz of the Dov Abramson Studio

    Music by Dov Rosenblatt and Blue Dot Sessions
  • The Five Books: Jewish Authors on the Books That Shaped Them

    Fran Fabriczki on “Homelooseness” and a Love Letter to Los Angeles

    2026-05-12 | 42 mins.
    In this conversation, Fran Fabriczki discusses coming of age between Hungary and Los Angeles and her experiences with cultural richness and antisemitism between the two countries. We also discuss “homelooseness” in The Nearest Thing to Life by James Wood, and JD Salinger’s relationship with Jewishness through his short story “Down at the Dinghy.” 

    Fran Fabriczki was born in Budapest. She has lived in Los Angeles and currently lives in London. She studied English at the University of Cambridge and worked in publishing for several years before becoming a novelist. She graduated from the University of East Anglia’s Creative Writing MA in 2022. Porcupines is her debut novel.

    In Porcupines, Sonia is a Hungarian immigrant who is raising her daughter, Mila on her own in sunny Los Angeles. Her days are a blur of not-quite-illegal business activities, dodging PTA moms, and baking birthday cakes laced with rum—minor mistakes that nevertheless continually remind her of everything she doesn’t understand about America and parenthood. Mila, meanwhile, is juggling violin and swimming lessons and navigating the treacherous social politics of school with the help of a less-than-helpful guidebook on how to be cool in the sixth grade—all the while trying to get her secretive mother to share something, anything, about her past. Moving between Budapest before the fall of the Berlin Wall; Washington, DC, in the tense years of the Cold War; and the bright sunshine of early aughts Los Angeles, Porcupines is an irresistible novel about mothers and daughters, secrecy and loneliness, belonging and reinvention—and what happens when the truth can’t be held back any longer.

    Fran Fabriczki's Five Books:


    The Devil’s Arithmetic by Jane Yolen


    “Down at the Dinghy” from Nine Stories by J.D. Salinger


    The Nearest Thing to Life by James Wood


    Going Home by Tom Lamont


    Porcupines by Fran Fabriczki

    Other Episodes You Might Enjoy:


    Allegra Goodman on “This is Not About Us”


    Sasha Vasilyuk on the Silences of the Soviet-Jewish Past


    Jessica Berger Gross on Cultural Judaism and Creative Resistance 

    The Five Books is a podcast that celebrates the role of books in Jewish culture. Through author interviews, we delve into Jewish identity and discover each author’s favorite novels. Join us every week for new Jewish book recommendations! Some of our episodes have included conversations with Rabbi Sharon Brous, Sam Sussman, Rabbi Angela Buchdahl and Allegra Goodman.

    ⁠⁠⁠Sign up for our newsletter⁠⁠⁠ to get new episode reminders, authors’ five book picks, and more delivered straight to your inbox.

    Find us on Instagram ⁠@fivebookspod ⁠or on Facebook at The Five Books Podcast.

    For feedback or author recommendations please email us at ⁠team@fivebookspod.org⁠

    For transcripts and more find us online at ⁠www.fivebookspod.org ⁠

    The Five Books has the advisory and promotional support of the Jewish Book Council. Jewish Book Council is a nonprofit dedicated to amplifying and celebrating Jewish literature and supporting authors and readers. Stay up to date on the latest in Jewish literature! ⁠https://www.jewishbookcouncil.org/events/celebrate⁠

    The Five Books is fiscally sponsored by FJC, a 501c3 public charity. 

    Hosted by Tali Rosenblatt Cohen

    Produced by Odelia Rubin

    Editorial and website support by Amelia Merrill

    Artwork by Elad Lifshitz of the Dov Abramson Studio

    Music by Dov Rosenblatt and Blue Dot Sessions
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About The Five Books: Jewish Authors on the Books That Shaped Them
The Five Books celebrates the role of books in our lives. Each week we’ll talk with a Jewish author about five books in five categories.  We’ll hear about: two Jewish books that have impacted the author’s Jewish identity; one book (not necessarily Jewish) that they think everyone should read - a book that changed their worldview. We’ll get a peek into what book they're reading now, and we’ll hear the inside scoop on the new book they’ve just published. The Five Books creates a space for all listeners to explore what it means to live, write, and read as a Jewish American today.
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