In the mainstream of Jewish collective memory, Jacob Frank was portrayed as an egomaniacal and depraved ignoramus, a false messiah, and a cynical serial convert-to Islam, then Christianity...Jay Michaelson makes a complementary theoretical argument in The Heresy of Jacob Frank, which received last year's National Jewish Book Award for scholarship...Michaelson, well known as a popular writer on religion and spirituality and an activist for gay rights both in Jewish life and the broader world, has been studying Jacob Frank for almost two decades...In a recent essay, he described being "seduced" by the "allure" of Frank's vigorous confrontation with traditional Jewish law and norms in The Words of the Lord, the late miscellany of Frank's oral teachings and anecdotes.
Benjamin Weiner, Jewish Review of Books
Michaelson reconstructs Frank's teachings with critical methodology, tracing how Frank both followed and resisted the disciplines of reason, magic, Kabbalah, and esotericism.
Yale Law Report
Using a phenomenological approach, Michaelson contextualizes and analyzes Frank's heresy in a new and original way and contributes to a richer understanding of the upheavals of Jewish early modernity.
Konstantin Aron Moser, Religious Studies Review
This book may offer researchers new ways to explore one of the most controversial and fascinating Jewish movements of the early modern period.
David Sclar, Religious Studies Review