A solid primer for accessing the Talmud - a hesitating step into the desert wandering which exceeds a lifetime. Fittingly enough, a "biography" of a text such as the Talmud could never be written; the writing and the work that it demands extend beyond the limits of any life, into the infinite.
Wimpfheimer does what he can, however, dividing the Talmud into three strata of interpretation and reception. He provides exemplary readings of a couple of passages, repeated in each of the three strata of access (one had never have thought they would give so much consideration to fire liability), as well as a very brief look at the history of the text and the interpretive sects which formed around it. The final section on contemporary relations to the Talmud is fairly disappointing, however, in its comparisons to Seinfeld (as though mundane minutiae were something exclusively talmudic?) and the superfluous tip of the hat to gender theory.
You get what you might expect with this one - a scholar obviously familiar with the text, struggling to make it amenable to the popular reader, only ending up doing a disservice to both said reader to whom he has cowed and the learned scholarship from which he has bowed out. But as a gift, one takes it with an open palm and a grateful smile...