David Ben-Gurion: A Life for Israel
"David Ben-Gurion: A Life for Israel" is a sweeping, intimate, and deeply human fictionalized narrative biography of one of the most iconic figures in modern Jewish history.
Told in Ben-Gurion's own imagined voice, this literary journey traces the life of Israel's founding father from the dusty streets of Plonsk to the desert sands of Sde Boker. Along the way, it captures not only the political battles and historic decisions that shaped the State of Israel, but also the private thoughts, moral wrestlings, and visionary convictions that shaped the man.
In this richly crafted account, Ben-Gurion emerges not as a marble statue, but as a complex, passionate, sometimes flawed yet unrelentingly hopeful leader. He is a dreamer with calloused hands, a statesman with the soul of a prophet. The reader walks with him through the frantic days of May 1948, the agony of the Altalena crisis, the conflicts with political allies and adversaries, the immigration waves and existential wars — but also through long nights of solitude in the Negev, conversations with students, and letters written to strangers who never expected a reply.
This book is not a conventional biography filled with dates and footnotes. It is a literary reimagining — a fictional memoir drawn from real events and historical context, designed to make the reader feel what it might have been like to beBen-Gurion. Through seven decades of struggle and vision, the chapters pulse with the urgency, uncertainty, and purpose of a man who refused to accept the exile of the Jewish people as permanent — and who saw the Jewish return not as an ending, but as a beginning.
From the inner tensions of building a "Jewish and democratic state" to the quiet moral dilemmas that linger behind public decisions, the narrative invites the reader into the inner life of a leader who was never content with mere survival. For Ben-Gurion, Israel was always a moral proposition — an opportunity to fuse ancient prophecy with modern statehood, to ask not only what kind of country must we build, but what kind of people must we become.
Written for a Jewish audience, but open to all, David Ben-Gurion: A Nation Still Becoming speaks to the spiritual, ethical, and historical questions that remain at the heart of the Jewish story. It is a book for those who long to reconnect with Zionism's original urgency — and who still believe that Israel is more than a place. It is a mission.
Whether you are a student of history, a lover of Jewish literature, or simply someone seeking to understand the soul behind the headlines, this book offers a window into the heart of the man who helped restore a people to its land — and who spent the rest of his life asking what they must do with that gift.
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Told in Ben-Gurion's own imagined voice, this literary journey traces the life of Israel's founding father from the dusty streets of Plonsk to the desert sands of Sde Boker. Along the way, it captures not only the political battles and historic decisions that shaped the State of Israel, but also the private thoughts, moral wrestlings, and visionary convictions that shaped the man.
In this richly crafted account, Ben-Gurion emerges not as a marble statue, but as a complex, passionate, sometimes flawed yet unrelentingly hopeful leader. He is a dreamer with calloused hands, a statesman with the soul of a prophet. The reader walks with him through the frantic days of May 1948, the agony of the Altalena crisis, the conflicts with political allies and adversaries, the immigration waves and existential wars — but also through long nights of solitude in the Negev, conversations with students, and letters written to strangers who never expected a reply.
This book is not a conventional biography filled with dates and footnotes. It is a literary reimagining — a fictional memoir drawn from real events and historical context, designed to make the reader feel what it might have been like to beBen-Gurion. Through seven decades of struggle and vision, the chapters pulse with the urgency, uncertainty, and purpose of a man who refused to accept the exile of the Jewish people as permanent — and who saw the Jewish return not as an ending, but as a beginning.
From the inner tensions of building a "Jewish and democratic state" to the quiet moral dilemmas that linger behind public decisions, the narrative invites the reader into the inner life of a leader who was never content with mere survival. For Ben-Gurion, Israel was always a moral proposition — an opportunity to fuse ancient prophecy with modern statehood, to ask not only what kind of country must we build, but what kind of people must we become.
Written for a Jewish audience, but open to all, David Ben-Gurion: A Nation Still Becoming speaks to the spiritual, ethical, and historical questions that remain at the heart of the Jewish story. It is a book for those who long to reconnect with Zionism's original urgency — and who still believe that Israel is more than a place. It is a mission.
Whether you are a student of history, a lover of Jewish literature, or simply someone seeking to understand the soul behind the headlines, this book offers a window into the heart of the man who helped restore a people to its land — and who spent the rest of his life asking what they must do with that gift.
David Ben-Gurion: A Life for Israel
"David Ben-Gurion: A Life for Israel" is a sweeping, intimate, and deeply human fictionalized narrative biography of one of the most iconic figures in modern Jewish history.
Told in Ben-Gurion's own imagined voice, this literary journey traces the life of Israel's founding father from the dusty streets of Plonsk to the desert sands of Sde Boker. Along the way, it captures not only the political battles and historic decisions that shaped the State of Israel, but also the private thoughts, moral wrestlings, and visionary convictions that shaped the man.
In this richly crafted account, Ben-Gurion emerges not as a marble statue, but as a complex, passionate, sometimes flawed yet unrelentingly hopeful leader. He is a dreamer with calloused hands, a statesman with the soul of a prophet. The reader walks with him through the frantic days of May 1948, the agony of the Altalena crisis, the conflicts with political allies and adversaries, the immigration waves and existential wars — but also through long nights of solitude in the Negev, conversations with students, and letters written to strangers who never expected a reply.
This book is not a conventional biography filled with dates and footnotes. It is a literary reimagining — a fictional memoir drawn from real events and historical context, designed to make the reader feel what it might have been like to beBen-Gurion. Through seven decades of struggle and vision, the chapters pulse with the urgency, uncertainty, and purpose of a man who refused to accept the exile of the Jewish people as permanent — and who saw the Jewish return not as an ending, but as a beginning.
From the inner tensions of building a "Jewish and democratic state" to the quiet moral dilemmas that linger behind public decisions, the narrative invites the reader into the inner life of a leader who was never content with mere survival. For Ben-Gurion, Israel was always a moral proposition — an opportunity to fuse ancient prophecy with modern statehood, to ask not only what kind of country must we build, but what kind of people must we become.
Written for a Jewish audience, but open to all, David Ben-Gurion: A Nation Still Becoming speaks to the spiritual, ethical, and historical questions that remain at the heart of the Jewish story. It is a book for those who long to reconnect with Zionism's original urgency — and who still believe that Israel is more than a place. It is a mission.
Whether you are a student of history, a lover of Jewish literature, or simply someone seeking to understand the soul behind the headlines, this book offers a window into the heart of the man who helped restore a people to its land — and who spent the rest of his life asking what they must do with that gift.
Told in Ben-Gurion's own imagined voice, this literary journey traces the life of Israel's founding father from the dusty streets of Plonsk to the desert sands of Sde Boker. Along the way, it captures not only the political battles and historic decisions that shaped the State of Israel, but also the private thoughts, moral wrestlings, and visionary convictions that shaped the man.
In this richly crafted account, Ben-Gurion emerges not as a marble statue, but as a complex, passionate, sometimes flawed yet unrelentingly hopeful leader. He is a dreamer with calloused hands, a statesman with the soul of a prophet. The reader walks with him through the frantic days of May 1948, the agony of the Altalena crisis, the conflicts with political allies and adversaries, the immigration waves and existential wars — but also through long nights of solitude in the Negev, conversations with students, and letters written to strangers who never expected a reply.
This book is not a conventional biography filled with dates and footnotes. It is a literary reimagining — a fictional memoir drawn from real events and historical context, designed to make the reader feel what it might have been like to beBen-Gurion. Through seven decades of struggle and vision, the chapters pulse with the urgency, uncertainty, and purpose of a man who refused to accept the exile of the Jewish people as permanent — and who saw the Jewish return not as an ending, but as a beginning.
From the inner tensions of building a "Jewish and democratic state" to the quiet moral dilemmas that linger behind public decisions, the narrative invites the reader into the inner life of a leader who was never content with mere survival. For Ben-Gurion, Israel was always a moral proposition — an opportunity to fuse ancient prophecy with modern statehood, to ask not only what kind of country must we build, but what kind of people must we become.
Written for a Jewish audience, but open to all, David Ben-Gurion: A Nation Still Becoming speaks to the spiritual, ethical, and historical questions that remain at the heart of the Jewish story. It is a book for those who long to reconnect with Zionism's original urgency — and who still believe that Israel is more than a place. It is a mission.
Whether you are a student of history, a lover of Jewish literature, or simply someone seeking to understand the soul behind the headlines, this book offers a window into the heart of the man who helped restore a people to its land — and who spent the rest of his life asking what they must do with that gift.
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David Ben-Gurion: A Life for Israel
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David Ben-Gurion: A Life for Israel
244
25.99
In Stock
Product Details
ISBN-13: | 9798319624284 |
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Publisher: | Barnes & Noble Press |
Publication date: | 07/08/2025 |
Pages: | 244 |
Product dimensions: | 5.50(w) x 8.50(h) x 0.51(d) |
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