Interview With A.J. Jacobs, Author of The Year Of Living Biblically
Published October 12, 2007
This is the first part of a two-part interview
In recapping my five favorite books so far this year I mentioned how much I was looking forward to the new book by the author A.J. Jacobs. I loved his last book, The Know-It-All and went a bit wild with enthusiasm quoting excerpts from the book as part of the interview.
He mentioned in that interview that his next book would be about a year of following the Bible's rules:
The next book is called The Year of Living Biblically, and it’s about my attempt to follow the rules of the Bible as literally as possible – from the famous ones like the Ten Commandments and Be Fruitful and Multiply right on down to stoning adulterers and growing a huge beard. That one was always both a personal project and actual book.
So I've been waiting with great anticipation for this book and was jealous when Newsweek did a good piece about the project. The book was officially released this week and already has great buzz. I've read the first 25 pages and am loving it already. A.J. agreed to another interview with me.
Scott: What sparked you to live a year following bible rules?
I grew up in an incredibly secular home. I'm Jewish in the same way that the Olive Garden is Italian. But I’ve become increasingly interested in the huge role religion plays in our world. It really is the defining issue of our time. Now that I have a kid, I wanted to figure out what to tell him about religion. So I decided to dive in head first. I wanted to get into the minds of the ancients who wrote and lived the Bible. Or into their sandals, I suppose. I wanted to figure out what was relevant and good for me, and what was maybe not so relevant.
How did you decide which rules and laws to go by?
I had a great spiritual advisory board made up of rabbis, priests and ministers (that sounds like the start to a joke, but it’s the truth) and they helped guide me. But the point of my quest was to follow every single law and piece of advice without picking and choosing to see what worked for me. So I also made my own list. I read the Bible from cover to cover and wrote down every one of them. From the famous (The Ten Commandments, Love Thy Neighbor, Be Fruitful and Multiply) to the arcane (don’t shave your beard, don’t wear clothes of mixed fibers, stone adulterers). Some rules were wise, some were baffling. Some seemed wise in the beginning, then became more baffling as the year wore on. Some seemed baffling in the beginning, but became more wise.
- Interview With A.J. Jacobs, Author of The Year Of Living Biblically
- Published: October 12, 2007
- Type: Interview
- Section: Books
- Filed Under: Books: Religion, Books: Memoir and Autobiography, Interviews
- Part of a feature: Scott Butki's Book Time: Interviews with Authors
- Writer: Scott Butki
- Scott Butki's BC Writer page
- Scott Butki's personal site
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Comments
Great. Thanks for that.
Also, I need to ask what this is I hear about his book becoming a movie.
The book was positively reviewed in the New York Times today





If you'd like to hear A.J. Jacobs talk about his new book, "The Year of Living Biblically," check out this audio interview link.