I'm a writer in New York.
My latest book -- THE YEAR OF LIVING BIBLICALLY -- just came out in paperback. As in this week! It's about how I followed every single rule of the Bible as literally as possible. From the Ten Commandments right on down to stoning adulterers.
A couple of years ago, I wrote a book called THE KNOW-IT-ALL about reading the entire Encyclopedia Britannica in my quest to learn everything important in the world (e.g. opossums have 13 nipples).
In other news, I have recently started using emoticons unabashedly. I am also a supporter of the much-maligned exclamation point. I like to network socially. I joined myspace and facebook but drew the line at something called Doostang. I have to draw the line somewhere.For more stuff, check out my website, ajjacobs.com
Hey, what's this now? I happen to have handy review from Publishers Weekly of The Year of Living Biblically!
Starred Review. What would it require for a person to live all the commandments of the Bible for an entire year? That is the question that animates this hilarious, quixotic, thought-provoking memoir from Jacobs (The Know-It-All). He didn't just keep the Bible's better-known moral laws (being honest, tithing to charity and trying to curb his lust), but also the obscure and unfathomable ones: not mixing wool with linen in his clothing; calling the days of the week by their ordinal numbers to avoid voicing the names of pagan gods; trying his hand at a 10-string harp; growing a ZZ Top beard; eating crickets; and paying the babysitter in cash at the end of each work day. (He considered some rules, such as killing magicians, too legally questionable to uphold.) In his attempts at living the Bible to the letter, Jacobs hits the road in highly entertaining fashion to meet other literalists, including Samaritans in Israel, snake handlers in Appalachia, Amish in Lancaster County, Pa., and biblical creationists in Kentucky. Throughout his journey, Jacobs comes across as a generous and thoughtful (and, yes, slightly neurotic) participant observer, lacing his story with absurdly funny cultural commentary as well as nuanced insights into the impossible task of biblical literalism. (Oct.)