Posted on January 9, 2008 by Steve Pollak

This just in ... National Jewish Book Award winners

How to Read the Bible by James Kugel

The Jewish Book Council has announced the 2007 National Jewish Book Award winners.

The big kahuna prize — the Jewish Book of the Year Award — went to James L. Kugel for "How to Read the Bible." The Council's Lifetiime Achievement Award went to Rabbi Harold S. Kushner.

Here is a sampling of winners in other categories:

In the American Jewish studies category, the award went to Edward K. Kaplan for "Spiritual Radical."

In the Anthologies and Collections category, the award went to "Antisemitism: The Generic Hatred: Essays in Memory of Simon Wiesenthal."

In the Biography, Autobiography & Memoir category, the award went to George Konrad for "A Guest in My Own Country: A Hungarian Life."

Vanessa L. Ochs took home the prize in the "Contemporary Jewish Life & Practice" category for her book, "Inventing Jewish Ritual."

Meir Shalev won the fiction book of the year for "A Pigeon and a Boy."

And, in the poetry category, Peter Cole, who won a MacArthur Fellowship earlier this year, received the award for his book, "The Dream of the Poem: Hebrew Poetry from Muslim and Christian Spain, 950-1492."

Kol hakavod to all the winners. For a complete list of winners and the runners-up, please visit the Jewish Book Council's Web site.

After you've checked out the list, let me know what you think. Did any significant books get left off the list this year or did the judges make all the right picks? I noticed there were no titles by Michael Chabon, Nathan Englander or Philip Roth. That's kind of surprising.

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