The Year of Living Biblically is the second experimental memoir by
Jacobs. Even though the idea behind the book is very similar to his
encyclopedia quest - to conduct a study and record the observations
- the final result is absolutely different. It does carry Jacobs's
quirky humor and sarcasm, but the monologue behind those is much
more serious and personal. Maybe it is so because of the subject
matter, but I found The Year of Living Biblically to be more deep.
Jacobs is doing it again. He throws random trivia from the Bible at
the reader. I've never known a rule about cheeseburgers, or the
mixed fibers, or the age of fruit trees. I've never known about the
existence of religious snake-handlers, or gay christians' group, or
people that would sacrifice a chicken for you. It is fascinating to
learn about all kinds of believers, from literalists to Cafeteria
Christians, or about different ways to interpret the same line in
the Scripture.
Again, there are crazy, wacky, colorful and absolutely lovable
characters that can happen only in real life. There is aunt Marti,
a feminist vegetarian, ex-uncle Gil, who is a self-proclaimed guru,
and Nancy, an eccentric neighbour and a friend of the late Jimi
Hendrix. They are all very wonderful and memorable.
Throughout the book, Jacobs discusses the morality of his actions
and sincerity of his deeds. He tries to be a better person, then
stops and wonders, if he does it for his project or out of good
intentions. He wants to find the clue in the ancient book that
would finally lead him to understanding the enigmatic faith and his
religious ancestry.
Over all I should say I enjoyed the book very much. It was easy to
read and follow, but it still made me think. Jacobs owes two more
books to Simon & Schuster, so I am looking forward to more
crazy experiments and thoughtful memoirs.