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The Fruit of Her Hands: The Story of Shira of Ashkenaz
 
 
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The Fruit of Her Hands: The Story of Shira of Ashkenaz [Hardcover]

Michelle Cameron (Author)
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (57 customer reviews)

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Book Description

September 8, 2009

Based on the life of the author’s thirteenth-century ancestor, Meir ben Baruch of Rothenberg, a renowed Jewish scholar of medieval Europe, this is the richly dramatic fictional story of Rabbi Meir’s wife, Shira, a devout but rebellious woman who preserves her religious traditions as she and her family witness the rise of anti-Semitism in Europe.

Raised by her widowed rabbi father and a Christian nursemaid in Normandy, Shira is a free-spirited, inquisitive girl whose love of learning shocks the community. When Shira’s father is arrested by the local baron intent on enforcing the Catholic Church’s strictures against heresy, Shira fights for his release and encounters two men who will influence her life profoundly—an inspiring Catholic priest and Meir ben Baruch, a brilliant scholar. In Meir, Shira finds her soulmate.

Married to Meir in Paris, Shira blossoms as a wife and mother, savoring the intellectual and social challenges that come with being the wife of a prominent scholar. After witnessing the burning of every copy of the Talmud in Paris, Shira and her family seek refuge in Germany. Yet even there they experience bloody pogroms and intensifying anti-Semitism. With no safe place for Jews in Europe, they set out for Israel only to see Meir captured and imprisoned by Rudolph I of Hapsburg. As Shira weathers heartbreak and works to find a middle ground between two warring religions, she shows her children and grandchildren how to embrace the joys of life, both secular and religious.

Vividly bringing to life a period rarely covered in historical fiction, this multi-generational novel will appeal to readers who enjoy Maggie Anton’s Rashi’s Daughters, Brenda Rickman Vantrease’s The Illuminator, and Geraldine Brooks’s People of the Book.


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The Fruit of Her Hands: The Story of Shira of Ashkenaz + Rashi's Daughters, Book III: Rachel: A Novel of Love and the Talmud in Medieval France + Rashi's Daughters, Book II: Miriam: A Novel of Love and the Talmud in Medieval France
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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

With a powerful immediacy, Cameron's meticulously researched historical is told by Shira, an anomalous 13th-century woman raised (and educated) like a son by her widowed father. After falling in love with and marrying the legendary Rabbi Meir ben Baruch, one of her father's most promising students, Shira's beauty and education attract the attention of a French scholar, Nicholas Donin, whose demented vendetta against Judaism threatens the lives of Jews across Europe. Shira and Meir must defend their faith and their marriage from Donin, and take a stand against the anti-Semitism choking Europe, but Shira is a passive, if touching, heroine. Shira is easy to identify with, but not very interesting. Still, readers will drink in the historical detail and be quick to forgive Shira's weaknesses for the sake of other rich characters like Donin and Baruch. (Sept.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Review

"Michelle Cameron deftly gives dramatic voice to the Jewish women of the Middle Ages. The Fruit of Her Hands is suspenseful, soulful, and plain wonderful. It takes us to the heights of scholarship and imagination." -- Ruchama King, author of Seven Blessings

"Michelle Cameron delves into one of the darkest eras of the Jewish past and brings forth a deeply compassionate and thoroughly gripping story of a woman whose fate is inextricably bound up with that of her people. Meticulously researched yet richly imaginative, it will keep you spellbound until the last, enthralling page." -- Eva Etzioni-Halevy, author of The Triumph of Deborah

"The Fruit of Her Hands lets the reader experience first-hand the tragic end of hundreds of years of Jewish presence in medieval France through the voice of its passionate and learned heroine. This novel shows us that women, too, can bear witness to history." -- Maggie Anton, author of Rashi's Daughters

"With a powerful immediacy, Cameron's meticulously researched historical is told by Shira, an anomalous 13th-century woman raised (and educated) like a son by her widowed father...Readers will drink in the historical detail." -- Publishers Weekly

"Cameron's clean, clear prose clings to the reader's memory long after it's been read, as does her heroine. This novel will appeal to everyone who craves an accurate, arresting novel." -- Romantic Times

"Readers who appreciated Maggie Anton's Rashi's Daughters trilogy will be entertained." -- Library Journal

"A beautifully written saga, [...] With strong main characters, a myriad of important secondary players, The Fruit of Her Hands is a gripping, fascinating, and informative narrative of a tragic, yet important historical period." -- Romance Reviews Today

"The Fruit of Her Hands is equally rich as history and fiction. ...[A] book so rich with wonderful characters, vivid settings, and an absolutely lush and wonderful depiction of the strengths of the medieval Jewish home and community. Cameron is an author I certainly hope to hear more from. This is a first-rate choice for Jewish book clubs." -- San Diego Jewish World

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 448 pages
  • Publisher: Gallery Books; First Edition edition (September 8, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1439118221
  • ISBN-13: 978-1439118221
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.1 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (57 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #274,799 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

At the age of 12, Michelle Cameron's father told her she would never become a writer. She believed him.

But Michelle kept writing anyway. When her family moved to Israel when she was 15, and Michelle spent three weeks in a bomb shelter (it was 1973 and her boarding school was close to the Syrian border), she wrote about the fires on the hills and the ground shaking above her head.

Completing her high school education in Israel, she attended Tel Aviv University, graduating with a degree in English Literature and then spent two years in the Israeli army. When she was ready to find her first job, she thought it would be temporary - just until she sold her first novel.

The demands of work and family made Michelle put her literary ambitions aside. As part of her technical writing career, she began working in the interactive arena, moving to companies that specialized in Internet creation. She is now Creative Director at a digital agency, working for varied past and present clients including New York City Ballet, the Juilliard School, Rutgers University, C.R. Bard, Inc., and many others.

Among the influences that brought Michelle back to writing was a six-year old muse - her son, Alex - whose early stories, poems, and cartoons made her remember why she wanted to write in the first place. She began to take her laptop with her in the car, writing in the karate dojo and in the bleachers of the ball field.

For a while, poetry came quicker than prose and Michelle began to submit and publish her work. The idea of writing a series of poems about William Shakespeare - whom Michelle had researched for one of her early novels - flowered into a verse novel, In the Shadow of the Globe, published in 2003 by Lit Pot Press. The book became the 2003-4 Winter Book Selection by the Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey and has been performed in many venues, including the Stella Adler Studio of Acting.

When Michelle cast about for her next writing topic, she began exploring her family tree for a possible plot line. It was then that she discovered the truth of her mother's claim that her side of the family could trace their roots back to the 1200s. Intrigued, Michelle began to research her ancestor, Meir of Rothenberg, becoming convinced that his amazing story needed to be told. The result is The Fruit of Her Hands.

To complete the novel, Michelle needed more time than she could find in the normal course of the day as she was juggling the day job, growing boys, and a part-time teaching position. Her solution? She now sets her alarm for 4:30 AM every morning.

 

Customer Reviews

57 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.2 out of 5 stars (57 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A compelling glimpse into a little-known part of Jewish history..., September 7, 2009
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This review is from: The Fruit of Her Hands: The Story of Shira of Ashkenaz (Hardcover)
Michelle Cameron's THE FRUIT OF HER HANDS tells the surprisingly fascinating story of Rabbi Meir of Rothenberg, Germany, the greatest Talmudic scholar of the 13th century, as seen through the eyes of his wife and soulmate, Shira.

The recorded history of Rabbi Meir, who is Cameron's ancestor, says nothing about his family other than he had a son, Suesskind, and several unnamed daughters. But Cameron reasoned that such a remarkable man would have had an equally remarkable wife, and so she invents Shira, the only daughter of a widowed French rabbi with a thirst for learning and a mind of her own.

The novel deftly weaves Meir and Shira into some of the darkest chapters of medieval Jewish history: The Paris disputation (trial) and mass burning of the Talmud in 1240-42, the blood libel of Little St. Hugh of Lincoln in 1255, and King Rudolph I's decision in 1286 to enslave the Jews of Germany, which forced Meir to flee to Palestine, only to be captured en route and imprisoned for ransom.

Meir and Shira also become entangled, politically and personally, with the villainous Nicholas Donin, a radical Jewish scholar who is rejected as a suitor for Shira's hand, excommunicated by the Chief Rabbi of Paris, and eventually becomes a Franciscan monk. Donin takes his revenge by convincing Pope Gregory IX to condemn the Talmud for blasphemy and King Louis IX of France to confiscate and burn 12,000 copies in Paris.

Cameron stays true to history and does not inflate Shira's role unduly. She is no proto-feminist or free-thinking firebrand, but rather an obedient daughter, a loving wife, and a restrained (if highly intelligent) observer of events whose greatest concern is keeping her family safe. Her greatest enemy after Nicholas Donin is her hypercritical mother-in-law.

Even so, Meir and Shira's struggle to survive and even thrive in an increasingly anti-Semitic Europe, the wealth of detail about Jewish life 700 years ago, the illuminating snippets of Talmudic wisdom and Jewish poetry, and Cameron's clean and lyrical writing make THE FRUIT OF HER HANDS a marvelous read and a remarkable achievement for a first-time novelist.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Mixed feelings, November 9, 2009
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This review is from: The Fruit of Her Hands: The Story of Shira of Ashkenaz (Hardcover)
Cameron retells the story of her ancestor with the fictional character of Shira - daughter of a rabbi in 13C France she is eventually wed to esteemed scholar Meir ben Baruch and they settle in Paris. The persecutions of the Jews reach new heights and Meier is among those who defend the Talmud but to no avail. They leave France to start a new life in Germany which is happy and successful at first, although the persecutions of the Jews in Europe continue to increase.

That's pretty much the basic plot outline, although of course there's quite a bit more to it than that - I'm just not too inspired today. While I did enjoy learning about a period and culture that I know little about, the author just didn't *suck* me into her world. I think those more interested in this topic might find it more interesting than I did, if you're not sure get it from the library. It's a good book; it's just not a great one.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Interesting and enlightening story, September 14, 2009
This review is from: The Fruit of Her Hands: The Story of Shira of Ashkenaz (Hardcover)
Sometimes, when we start researching our family tree, we discover an ancestor who makes us proud. When author, Michelle Cameron, found she descended from Rabbi Meir ben Baruch, she decided to learn as much as she could about him, and memorialize him in a novel.

Through the eyes of his fictional wife, Shira, we revisit 13th century Europe, at the rise of anti-Semitism. During this time period, the Talmud was burned, and growing mistrust of the Jewish people caused their cruel persecution and imprisonment. But Shira and her family are strong in their faith and community, and refuse to allow their fears to control them. In the midst of this unrest, we learn what a great and important man Rabbi Meir ben Baruch is in his lifetime.

Blending the history of her ancestor and his fictional family with Jewish faith and custom, The Fruit of Her Hands is a moving story that spans several generations. When we first meet Shira, she's a young girl. She marries, has children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren by the time the story concludes.

Fear of a group of people causes humanity to act in ways that are unfathomable to rational minds. Yet we see behavior like this time and time again. But exeriencing how the Jews were persecuted, first-hand through Shira's thoughts and memories, reminds us not to judge based on appearances. There's a lesson for all of us in this remarkable story.

Reviewer: Alice Berger
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