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The Books of Jacob book review: Overlong and leaves us with little more than undigested historical research

Countless characters pass the reader by, underdeveloped and unrealised, their inner lives unexplored

May 12, 2022 15:15
Jacob Frank jakub frank wiki
2 min read

The Books of Jacob
By Olga Tokarczuk
Trans: Jennifer Croft
Fitzcarraldo Editions, £20
Reviewed by Mark Glanville

Born Yankiele Leybowicz in Korołówka (then eastern Poland, now Ukraine) in 1726, Jacob Frank, Jewish heretic, spiritual descendant of the false messiah Shabbatai Tzvi, and subject of Nobel Prize-winning author Olga Tokarczuk’s book, spent his early life in Czernovitz where Shabbataism was prevalent. Returning to Poland after a period in Salonika, a charismatic figure, he attracted a large following.

In the first of two Church-sponsored disputations with Jewish religious representatives, the Frankists argued that the Talmud was “filled with countless blasphemies”, leading to the burning of thousands of Jewish religious texts throughout Poland. In the second, Frankists employed dishonest sophistry to claim that Jews used the blood of Christian children to make unleavened bread at Passover, with predictable consequences. Much to the delight of the Church, the Frankists then converted to Catholicism on the basis that, “you have to… go into the darkness to see clearly.”