"The splendid achievement and pleasure of this text lie in its refusal to simplify. At home in the world of Jewish commentary, Adam Zachary Newton beautifully explicates Levinas and Leibowitz as critics of the Western philosophical tradition, while subjecting their own works to clear-eyed critique launched in part from the other side of the fence. A powerful, timely, and very Jewish book." -- David Suchoff, Colby College
"With his wide knowledge of contemporary thought, ranging across many fields, combined with his passionate engagement in the Jewish religious tradition, Adam Newton brings a wealth of fresh insights. His book is an important and necessary corrective: it contributes to the profound task of understanding Levinas's ethical philosophy in the light of the Jewish tradition, and the Jewish tradition in the light of modern thought." -- Richard A. Cohen, author of Elevations: The Height of the Good in Rosenzweig and Levinas
"Richly researched and wonderfully written, with some of the most interesting rabbinic text-work I have seen in studies of Levinas." -- Peter Ochs, editor of Reviewing the Covenant: Eugene B. Borowitz and the Postmodern Renewal of Jewish Theology