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Rhapsody of reading

Saturday night and The Genius of Gershwin

March 5, 2015 14:54
Well red: Julia Neuberger and Andrew Solomon

By

Gerald Jacobs,

Gerald Jacobs

3 min read

Saturday night and The Genius of Gershwin. It was an audacious and imaginative decision to launch this year's Jewish Book Week with the sound of the composer of Rhapsody in Blue.

Yet, by the festival's close last Sunday, it was another colour that had registered vividly in my mind. For the event that most took me by surprise was unmistakably coloured red.

On the stage of the main hall at King's Place, King's Cross, was Anglo-Jewry's cherished rabbinical baroness, Julia Neuberger, installed as interlocutor to Andrew Solomon, psychologist and author of the book, Far From the Tree, published a couple of years ago but which I have yet to read. And an arresting sight they made, too, the baroness in flowing crimson scarf, the psychologist in impeccably scarlet trousers.

But theirs was a discussion that went many fathoms deeper than the surface signatures of fashion. Far From the Tree is a mighty book based on research into areas unknown and untrodden by most of us but which are of great significance for the understanding of human life.

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