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Eminent Jews by David Denby

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Eminent Jews

Bernstein, Brooks, Friedan, Mailer

David Denby

Henry Holt and Co. · Print & ebook · April 8, 2025

Reading lane: Cultural Heritage Lives

Leonard Bernstein, Mel Brooks, Betty Friedan, and Norman Mailer.

At a Glance

Why This Clicks

Cultural Portraits

A brisk, observant look at Jewish American public lives, with Denby’s critic’s wit intact.

Come here for

  • David Denby’s eye on American Jewish cultural life
  • Biography filtered through criticism and comedy

Expect

  • Profiles of Bernstein, Brooks, Friedan, and Mailer
  • Insight over exhaustive life story

Book Details

Authors
David Denby
Publisher
Henry Holt and Co.
Published
April 8, 2025
Format
Print & ebook
Theme
Cultural Heritage Lives · Lives in Entertainment
Reading lane
Cultural Heritage Lives

Affinity

Publisher Categories

  • Cultural Heritage Lives

  • Lives in Entertainment

  • Jewish History

About This Book

Leonard Bernstein, Mel Brooks, Betty Friedan, and Norman Mailer. Brilliant, brash, yet soulful, they were 100 percent Jewish and 100 percent American. They upended the restrained culture of their forebears and changed American life. They worked in different fields, and, apart from clinking glasses at parties now and then, they hardly knew one another. But they shared a historical moment and a common temperament. For all four, their Jewish heritage was electrified by American...

Read full description

Leonard Bernstein, Mel Brooks, Betty Friedan, and Norman Mailer. Brilliant, brash, yet soulful, they were 100 percent Jewish and 100 percent American. They upended the restrained culture of their forebears and changed American life. They worked in different fields, and, apart from clinking glasses at parties now and then, they hardly knew one another. But they shared a historical moment and a common temperament. For all four, their Jewish heritage was electrified by American liberty. The results were explosive. As prosperity for Jews increased and anti-Semitism began to fade after World War II, these four creative giants stormed through the latter half of the twentieth century, altering the way people around the world listened to music, defined what was vulgar, comprehended the relations of men and women, and understood the American soul. They were not saints; they were turbulent and self-dissatisfied intellectuals who fearlessly wielded their own newly won freedom to charge up American culture. Celebratory yet candid, at times fiercely critical, David Denby presents these four figures as egotistical and generous—larger-than-life, all of them, yet vulnerable, even heartbreaking, in their ambition, ferocity, and pride.

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