Forbidden is an engaging and surprisingly cheerful study of that odd couple of the religious imagination, the Jew and the pig... The anthropologist in Mr. Rosenblum calls [ Jewish-American pork-eaters] a 'balancing of rupture and continuity.' There is, of course, no balancing rupture and continuity. Sometimes, you have to pick a side. And a main. (Wall Street Journal) An enlightening historical exposé of the remarkable transformation of the pig from an obscure animal in Jewish dietary laws to the center of what it means to be Jewish. (Foreword Reviews) A rich and highly readable Jewish cultural history of the pig. Based on an impressive array of sources, Rosenblum shows that the pig has been a defining feature of Jewish identity from ancient Israel through today. - Beth Berkowitz, author of Animals and Animality in the Babylonian Talmud Easy to read, spiced with humor and new information. Who knew there was so much history between Jews and pigs? (Jewish Herald-Voice) Using a wealth of sources, Rosenblum invites readers to delve deep into the Jewish cultural significance of the swine over time. (The Jewish Book Council) A historical tour d'horizon of the obsessive focus on Jews and the pig from antiquity to the present... Given [ Rosenblum's] past scholarship on Jewish foodways in antiquity, it comes as no surprise that the analyses of classical texts sparkle... Those who eat 'pork for dinner,' those repelled by the very thought, and those somewhere in between will all find food for thought in this illuminating volume. - Jonathan Sarna (Contemporary Jewry) A lively new history. (The Jewish Chronicle) Captivating and contagious The depth into which Rosenblum reaches to uncover minute and key details and hidden correlations equally deserves praise. (Association of Jewish Libraries) Wonderfully written Rosenblum's book, a model of bringing religion, history, and contemporary experience together, shows how the decisions we make today often live in the shadow of those we have faced for centuries. (The Jewish News of Northern California)