“those who labor in the vineyards of Dylanology … owe Rogovoy a great debt” – Ron Rosenbaum

Tuesday, February 23rd, 2010

In “Bob Dylan: Messiah or Escape Artist?,” his review of BOB DYLAN: Prophet Mystic Poet, in the premiere issue of the new Jewish Review of Books, critic Ron Rosenbaum – a columnist for Slate and the author of Explaining Hitler and The Shakespeare Wars, who is working on a book on Bob Dylan for Yale University Press – hails Seth Rogovoy’s “exemplary research” and says that “...those who labor in the vineyards of Dylanology … owe Rogovoy a great debt for persuasively tracking so many Dylan words, lines, and allusions to Biblical sources we might not have noticed.”

Rosenbaum goes on to say that “Rogovoy’s source-hunting is so relentless, one can only bow to his ingenuity as he pins just about every Dylan line you can think of, like a dead butterfly, to its biblical source box. I was particularly impressed by the wealth of allusions to the Davidic stories he finds.”

He hails the book’s “…deepening of the detailed picture now emerging of Dylan’s Jewish upbringing. Rogovoy shows that the Zimmermans were at ‘the center of Jewish life in Hibbing,’ and that young Robert’s bar mitzvah broke attendance records at the local hotel.”

Read the text of the full review here.



…those who labor in the vineyards of Dylanology … owe Rogovoy a great debt for persuasively tracking so many Dylan words, lines, and allusions to Biblical sources we might not have noticed.

“This book explores some previously unrevealed truths of the Jewish foundation of some of Dylan’s songs.” – Whole Phamily

Monday, February 22nd, 2010

The blogger Whole Phamily, who describes the blog as “An exploration about the connectivity of names, people, and ideas in the Jewish community and beyond,” takes note of BOB DYLAN: Prophet Mystic Poet, saying that “there is no denying that Dylan is a part of the Whole Phamily and he has his Yiddishkeit to thank a bissel.  This book explores some previously unrevealed truths of the Jewish foundation of some of Dylan’s songs.”

there is no denying that Dylan is a part of the Whole Phamily and he has his Yiddishkeit to thank a bissel.  This book explores some previously unrevealed truths of the Jewish foundation of some of Dylan’s songs.

“a fascinating perspective on Dylan and his songs” – Folk Roots/Folk Branches

Wednesday, February 17th, 2010

Bob Dylan book jacket.for twitterVeteran music journalist and broadcaster Mike Regenstreif says that BOB DYLAN: Prophet Mystic Poet offers readers “a fascinating perspective on Dylan and his songs” in his review of the book that ran in the Ottawa Jewish Bulletin and is reprinted on his own blog.

“essential reading for any serious Bob Dylan fan” – Dylan critic Peter Stone Brown

Wednesday, February 10th, 2010

Bob Dylan book jacket.for twitterIn his review of Bob Dylan: Prophet Mystic Poet, Peter Stone Brown, a long-time music critic and Dylan expert, as well as a singer-songwriter in his own right, calls the book “essential reading for any serious Bob Dylan fan.”

Brown says that in showing “how much of what is commonly referred to as [the Bible] informs a large part of Dylan’s work … Rogovoy succeeds beyond admirably and does so in a more coherent fashion than any previous attempt. ”

Brown offers that “Many of [the book’s] discoveries are not only interesting, but surprisingly mind-blowing, such as linking ‘Can You Please Crawl Out Your Window’ to David, the warrior King,” and that “the last part of the book, from Oh Mercy to the present, was the best part, both in terms of the writing, which has a far more natural flow, and in what is revealed about the songs…. what Rogovoy reveals about Oh Mercy in particular is enough to cause a thorough reexamination of the album and what it is saying.”

Brown concludes that “what this book does is open up a generous host of Bob Dylan songs and at time entire albums to a whole new realm of interpretation. “

“soundly earns its place on the shelf alongside other notable examinations of Dylan’s canon.” – Jeremy D. Goodwin

Friday, January 29th, 2010

Bob Dylan book jacket.for twitter

Noted rock critic and author Jeremy D. Goodwin has this to say about Bob Dylan: Prophet Mystic Poet:

“this revelatory book does wonders in elucidating the enduring influence of Judaism on Dylan’s work, and demystifying broad stretches of the canon, from the ‘breadcrumb sins’ of ‘Gates of Eden’ to the daily prayer rituals embedded within New Morning. In the process, Rogovoy has reclaimed Bob Dylan as a Jewish-influenced artist. It’s a new morning for Dylan scholarship indeed.”

“It soundly earns its place on the shelf alongside other notable examinations of Dylan’s canon.”

The complete review.