cover image Maimonides: The Life and World of One of Civilization’s Greatest Minds

Maimonides: The Life and World of One of Civilization’s Greatest Minds

Joel L. Kraemer. Doubleday, $39.95 (621pp) ISBN 978-0-385-51199-5

In 1947, when he was 14, Kraemer started to study Maimonides. Now, the 75-year-old professor emeritus at the University of Chicago has produced his magnum opus, a definitive biography of medieval Judaism’s chief intellectual sage. To prepare himself, Kraemer mastered many languages, traveled throughout the world and studied innumerable documents, including those found in the Genizah, the storeroom of Cairo’s Ben Ezra synagogue. The impressive results of Kraemer’s diligent research are set forth in this learned book, supported by 90 pages of footnotes. He offers a splendid analysis of Maimonides’s major works: Commentary on the Mishnah ; Mishneh Torah and Guide to the Perplexed (which Kraemer calls Guide of the Perplexed.) The erudite presentation includes vital information about the life of Maimonides, tracing his path from his birth in Spain to his move to Morocco, his visit to Palestine and, finally, to his settling in Egypt. Kraemer’s imposing contribution is designed for his fellow scholars. General readers should turn to the more fathomable 2005 biography, Maimonides by Sherwin B. Nuland, from Nextbook/Schocken’s Jewish Encounters series and just published in paper. (Oct. 28)