Merav Mack is a historian and scholar of contemporary religion affiliated with the Harry S. Truman Research Institute at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and the German Protestant Institute for Archaeology at Augusta Victoria. Her current research focuses on Christian minorities in the Middle East. Benjamin Balint is a writer and translator based at the Van Leer Institute in Jerusalem. His previous books include Running Commentary and Kafka's Last Trial.
This book reads like a scholastic thriller, full of ghost scrolls, forgeries, buried texts and thieving bishops - Frank Lawton, Spectator [The book] creates for the reader a new landscape of the mind, and it reminds us why, even though we may feel we have heard enough of the Holy City, it remains a place of marvels-Fr Alexander Lucie-Smith, Catholic Herald An unforgettable journey through the world of books in Jerusalem, and an unparalleled portrait of one of the world's great cities. -Matti Friedman, author of The Aleppo Codex For those who love Jerusalem, Jerusalem: City of the Book will be a welcome treat. But all those interested in what religions share, and how they may co-exist, will also learn a great deal from this lively, and often surprising book. -Miri Rubin, Queen Mary University of London Traveling across Jerusalem and beyond, two humanist flaneurs find shame and pride, secrecy and sacredness, and a palimpsest made of innumerable religious and secular texts and libraries. A wonderfully wondrous journey. -Cyrus Schayegh, author of The Middle East and the Making of the Modern World In their exquisite and brilliant exploration of the intricacies of Jerusalem's libraries, Merav Mack and Benjamin Balint provide us with one of the most intimate and beautiful portraits ever written of Jerusalem. In unraveling the written treasures of Jerusalem, the overlapping maps of the sacred of the three Abrahamic religions unfold before our eyes, constituting Jerusalem as a simultaneous space of sublimity, rivalry, rupture and return. -Moshe Halbertal, author of Maimonides: Life and Thought A marvelous book which brings alive the history over many centuries of Jerusalem's books, libraries, and the librarians who have been-and still are-their guardians. Sensitively and thoughtfully making links between the contested and controversial past and the present, the authors illuminate how books and libraries can bridge divides and shape the future. -David Bates, former Director of the Institute of Historical Research in the University of London