"Jacob: Unexpected Patriarch," appeared several years ago, and has been issued anew in the Yale University Press series: Jewish Lives. I noticed an advertisement for it on Facebook, and sent away for the first four books in the series. "Jacob: Unexpected Patriarch", by Yair Zakovitch is the first book in the series. The author is the emeritus Father Take Otsuki professor of Bible at The Hebrew University, Jerusalem. He wrote this book in Hebrew, and it has been translated by Valerie Zakovitch.
In the past I have read a number of histories, poetry, non-fiction and novels by Jewish writers -- books that I have always enjoyed. This is the first time that I have read a biblical commentary by a Jewish scholar. The book does not disappoint. Being a Hebrew-speaker, Zakovitch presents the many dances of the working in the Biblical texts surrounding the life and figure of Jacob, son of Isaac, in the book of Genesis. "Writing a biography in the usual sense is not possible… One who aims to record the life of a biblical figure -- namely one of the earliest of the Bible's characters who is mentioned nowhere outside it -- is practically limited to a single source, the story that is recorded within the Bible's pages. Is such a biography even possible? The wise writer is forced to scrutinize the Bible's verses under a microscope…" (pp. 7-8).
Zakovitch concedes that it is not really possible to write a biography of Jacob the Patriarch in the modern sense of the word. What he does is examine texts and artfully notes nuances and doubles in the telling of the stories, carefully lifting layers in the telling of the stories of Jacob as an archaeologist would carefully remove layers of earth and rubble to uncover ancient artifacts. How much of the narrative in Genesis is about one man, Jacob, and how much is a reflection, critique or apologia for the nation the Jacob would sire? Professor Zakovitch is a careful archeologist and a brilliant scholar. At the end of the book I was very happy to have let him lead me on a journey of discovery of the ancient and pivotal figure that is Jacob son of Isaac/Israel who "contends with humans and God."
My hope is to read this book again, and I highly recommend it to those who want a deeper appreciation of the Bible and of the Faith of both Israel and Christianity.