This pacy police thriller set in Budapest might put the capital back on the city break map
By Alan Montague
Yishai Sarid's dark satire exposes the bleak underbelly of Israeli Shoah remembrance
Kukafka's career took off when she was just a student
The works cover topics from the Holocaust and Jewish life, to politics, gender, family
In 40 years, David Herman has reviewed the cream of Jewish literature. To mark his 250th review, he's picked out his favourite reads
Mathilde Frot is entertained by a joyfully romantic debut novel
Geoffrey Charin's debut novel is a terrific historical thriller
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Jenni Frazer meets a judge and a solicitor who've written books inspired by their legal careers
By Jenni Frazer
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An abundance of errors makes this hugely disappointing book a real missed opportunity
By David Herman
Jewish Renaissance has sustained twenty years of Jewish cultural craftwork
By Robert Low
Sipora Levy detects musical potential in an astonishing family story
By Sipora Levy
In 'Balkan Spaces' Richard Berengarten's passion and erudition opens up a fascinating world
By Mark Glanville
Charmian Brinson and Richard Dove have produced an impressively comprehensive and well overdue addition to the historical record
By Amanda Hopkinson
A new biography brings to life Thomas Kendrick, described recently in this newspaper as 'The British Shindler'
By Ahron Bregman
An ambitious novel confirms that Keith Stuart is a writer of some talent
By Daniel Snowman
Robert Peston's debut novel is genuinely entertaining, but perhaps too close to life
By Martin Bright