Theologian Christopher West cheekily described 'The Song of Songs' as "the centerfold of the Bible," but Dr. Ilana Pardes's fascinating history of the text paints a completely different portrait. To illustrate this, the word "pornography" does not appear once in her book, nor should it. 'The Song of Songs' is a celebration of the most basic human emotion that the Christian world too often puts itself in open war against: love.
As Dr. Pardes shows, 'The Song of Songs' once stood head and shoulders above its peers. Rabbi Akiva (c. 50–135 CE) famously declared "the whole world is not worth the day on which the Song of Songs was given," adding "had the Torah not been given, the world could have been conducted by the Song of Songs." In hindsight, it is a tragedy the latter did not come to be. 'The Song of Songs' stands in such sharp contrast to the rape and murder that typifies the Old Testament that 'The Song of Songs: A Biography' makes you lament how the Songs was not the ONLY book in the Bible. Had the Abrahamic religions followed 'The Song of Songs' more closely than the hateful preaching of Deuteronomy or Leviticus, then perhaps we would be living in a more loving, peaceful world resembling the works of Whitman than the sexless, apocalyptic hate-speech evident in contemporary white evangelicalism. Such were my thoughts after reading 'The Song of Songs: A Biography,' particularly after finishing Pardes's brilliant chapter on the Song's influence on Walt Whitman, Herman Melville, and Toni Morrison.
'The Song of Songs: A Biography' was my second venture into Princeton's "Lives of Great Religious Books" series, and after being delighted once again, I cannot recommend this book or its collection with higher praise. Please read this book and subscribe to its series. I plan on reading every book in this collection after finishing 'The Song of Songs: A Biography,' and I hope you do as well. 5 stars.