Memorial Day weekend is the moment everyone suddenly remembers they meant to read more. The stack on the nightstand. The book a friend recommended six months ago. The subject you kept telling yourself you’d get to.
This is that moment. All of Israel365’s print books are 20% off. These are books about biblical prophecy unfolding in real time, about the land where Scripture happened, about the questions that have shaped Jewish and Christian faith for three thousand years. Every one of them will change how you read your Bible and how you understand the news.
Summer is long enough. Start here.
Countdown: American Jews and God’s Plan for Redemption by Rabbi Elie Mischel
Something is happening to American Jews and most of them can’t explain it. Antisemitism is no longer coming from the fringes. It’s coming from elite universities, from Congress, from cable news hosts with millions of followers. Jewish students are harassed. Synagogues need armed guards. Jewish politicians are accused of dual loyalty. The pressure to choose between America and Israel is no longer theoretical.

Rabbi Elie Mischel, an Orthodox rabbi who left America to raise his family in Judea, argues that none of this is a surprise. The Hebrew Bible predicted it. Not vaguely. Specifically. He traces the same test from the Book of Esther to the streets of modern America, and the argument he makes is harder to dismiss with every passing week.
The countdown, he says, has already begun. Read this book and you’ll understand why so many people feel that in their bones even if they can’t articulate it.
Cup of Salvation by Rabbi Pesach Wolicki
Every Passover Seder ends with Psalms 113 through 118, the Hallel. Jews have been chanting these six psalms for thousands of years. Most people who say the words couldn’t tell you what they actually mean.

Rabbi Pesach Wolicki, one of Jerusalem’s finest Bible educators, wrote this book to fix that. He goes through each psalm in the original Hebrew, unpacking words and images that generations of readers have rushed past without stopping. The result is the kind of study that makes you feel like you’re reading these psalms for the first time. For Christian readers there’s something else worth knowing: these are the hymns sung at the Last Supper. Not probably. Almost certainly. Understanding what those words meant to the people who first sang them changes everything about how you hear them.
Hebron: Journey to Our Roots by Dr. Noam Arnon
Nearly four thousand years ago, Abraham bought a field in Hebron. He paid full price, in silver, in front of witnesses. The transaction is recorded in Genesis 23 in more legal detail than almost anything else in the Torah, as if the text itself understood that this purchase would be contested forever.

It has been. Dr. Noam Arnon has spent decades studying, guiding, and writing about Hebron, and this book is the fruit of that work. He takes you through the Cave of Machpelah, where the Patriarchs and Matriarchs are buried beneath a structure Herod built two thousand years ago that still stands today. Through Tel Hebron, where archaeologists keep finding things that rewrite what we thought we knew. Through streets where the oldest continuous Jewish community in the world has lived, been massacred, expelled, and returned. The photography is extraordinary. But what stays with you is the story.
Blessings: A Shabbat Dinner Companion by Rabbi Josh and Chana Jenny
For nearly thirty years, Rabbi Josh and Chana Jenny have opened their Jerusalem home every Friday night to strangers. Thousands of guests from dozens of countries have sat at their Shabbat table. Many of them had never experienced Shabbat before. Most of them left changed.

This book is their attempt to bring that table to you. It walks through the rituals, the blessings, the food, and the stories with the warmth of people who have done this ten thousand times and still mean every word. If you’ve ever sat at a Shabbat table and wanted to understand what was actually happening, this is the book. If you never have, this is the invitation.
The Transfer Agreement by Edwin Black
In the summer of 1933, with Hitler six months into power and the Nazi economy teetering, Jewish leaders around the world had him cornered. A global Jewish-led boycott of German goods was working. Department stores in New York and London refused to stock German products. German exports were collapsing. The Nazi regime was in genuine financial trouble.
Then the Zionists made a deal.

Edwin Black spent years in archives across three continents piecing together what actually happened: a negotiated agreement between Zionist organizations and the Third Reich that transferred 50,000 Jews and $100 million in assets to Mandatory Palestine, in exchange for ending the boycott that was threatening to topple Hitler before he had fully consolidated power.
The arguments about that decision have never stopped. Black doesn’t pretend they should. What he does is something harder: he reconstructs exactly what the people who made that choice knew, what they feared, and what they were trying to save. It’s one of the most gripping and morally serious books written about the birth of modern Israel, and it reads like a thriller.
Get 20% off all print books this weekend only. Order before the sale ends.