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Adin Steinsaltz (1937–2020)

Author of The Essential Talmud

300 Works 5,279 Members 37 Reviews 4 Favorited

About the Author

Rabbi Adin Steinsaltz is the editor and translator of Random House's twenty-two-volume edition of the Talmud. He is also the author of many volumes on Jewish thought and practice and has been a resident scholar at both Yale University and the Institute for Advanced Study. In 1988 he was invited to show more open a Judaic studies center in Moscow, the first such institution in the former Soviet Union in sixty years. Rabbi Steinsaltz lives in Israel. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Image credit: WIkipedia

Series

Works by Adin Steinsaltz

The Essential Talmud (1976) 888 copies
A Guide to Jewish Prayer (2000) 212 copies
Biblical Images (1984) 100 copies
Opening the Tanya (2003) 74 copies
The Strife of the Spirit (1988) 66 copies
My Rebbe (2014) 34 copies
The Passover Haggadah (1980) 34 copies
Talmudic Images (1997) 31 copies
On Being Free (1995) 28 copies
A Dear Son to Me (2002) 16 copies
Talks on the Parasha (2011) 13 copies
Personnages du Talmud (1987) 11 copies
A Concise Guide to Torah (2021) 8 copies
The Woman of Valor (1993) 6 copies
נשים במקרא (1983) 5 copies
The Soul (2018) 4 copies
Cos'è il Talmùd (2004) 4 copies
L'Anima ######### (2018) 2 copies
Téchouva (2008) 1 copy

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Common Knowledge

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Reviews

The Noé Edition Koren Talmud Bavli - Medium Size (B&W) Complete Set, 1-42
 
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PaideiaLibrary | Feb 27, 2024 |
Detailed explanation of what the Talmud is and a summary of its teachings. Reading this, one can see why there are so many Jewish scholars, scientists, virtuoso musicians, and so on. All of those things take a lot of intense study, and the study of the Talmud is perhaps the exemplar of such study. After all, it is not just a commentary itself, but there are commentaries on the commentaries (and probably commentaries on the commentaries on the commentaries!) Now, you can also say that arguing for centuries over things that seem so inconsequential is also a great waste of time. And of course, given that the underlying text--the Torah, i.e., the first 5 books of the Jewish Bible--are full of stories about less than honorable people--and I don't just mean NON-Jews--I can also ask, "What's the point? How can anyone believe in any of this?" But, if I were Jewish, the opportunity to spend my life, supported by the state, endlessly re-reading and trying to find new interpretations of the Talmud, would not be an unattractive prospect. But, this book is well organized, clearly written, and though a bit dense at times, actually enjoyable. Well done job of making a bit of a mystery--for a non-Jew in any case--a bit clearer.… (more)
 
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datrappert | 6 other reviews | Oct 3, 2023 |
I'm not going to give stars to the talmud, because that would be weird. What I will say is that I switched to the Koren Noe edition for Daf Yomi about a dozen dapim in and I'm glad I did -- the commentary provides a lot of necessary context. R'Steinsaltz' (z''l) translations are thoughtful and extremely helpful. I did read this primarily in the aramaic, and although my language skills mostly held up the original text is elliptic and full of unclear allusions, and I was very grateful for the side-by-side translation.… (more)
 
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settingshadow | 1 other review | Aug 19, 2023 |
As the pandemic picked up, I switched over to almost entirely English reading for daf yomi, and the Noe edition held up to this as well. Rarely did I feel like I was missing something crucial (for wordplay and mnemonic devices the shoreshim are including in the English translation as well.) I wish this volume had more information about the personalities -- the superscript P's don't continue on very much for Rabbis discussed in Berakhot and I would have found it helpful to continue to have annotations about who they were. (Aslo, Shabbat is a profoundly dense tractate, often very foreign to the modern reader...or perhaps it's just me who no longer treats jaundice by shaving donkeys, bloodletting them from their head and then anointing patients with the resulting blood. Good thing -- you have to really be careful doing that because if the blood gets in the patient’s eyes it blinds them. And also it's controversial whether you can do that on Shabbat)… (more)
 
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settingshadow | Aug 19, 2023 |

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Works
300
Members
5,279
Popularity
#4,718
Rating
½ 4.3
Reviews
37
ISBNs
287
Languages
8
Favorited
4

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