We are thrilled to share that Golden Threads by Ariella Aรฏsha Azoulay won a National Jewish Book Award in the category of Sephardic Culture, and PROTOCOLS: An Erasure by Daniela Naomi Molnar was named a finalist in the Poetry category.  

SURVIVA: A Future Ancestral Field Guide by Cannupa Hanska Luger โ€” available now


We are honored to share that SURVIVA: A Future Ancestral Field Guide by Cannupa Hanska Luger has been named a finalist for the PEN Americaโ€™s 2026 PEN/Jean Stein Book Award!

An ambitious, world-envisioning work of Indigenous futurism.

Since 2015โ€”through a proliferation of forms including sculpture, regalia, film, photography, poetry, painting, and installationโ€”acclaimed multimedia artist Cannupa Hanska Luger has been weaving together strands of a new myth. Collectively referred to as Future Ancestral Technologies, this sprawling series of interrelated works seeks to reimagine Indigenous life and culture in a postcolonial world where space exploration has reduced and reconfigured the earthโ€™s population.

Part graphic novel, part art book, SURVIVA: A Future Ancestral Field Guide offers readers a view beneath, beyond, and between the lines of Lugerโ€™s ever-expanding artistic universe. In this ecstatically hybrid work, Luger transforms a 1970s military survival guide through poetic redaction, speculative fiction, and iterative line drawingโ€”deftly surfacing and disrupting the colonial subconscious that haunts this vexed source text. An epic and timely meditation on planetary life in the midst of transformation, SURVIVA boldly presents an earth-based, demilitarized futuredream that foregrounds Indigenous knowledge as critical to humanityโ€™s survival.

SURVIVA is the first title from Aora Books, a publishing imprint dedicated to exploring transformational thought and culture that transcends borders, disciplines, and traditions. Rooted in an ethos of polyvocality and planetary consciousness, Aora publishes works that forge bold connections across time, place, ideas, and beings often seen as separate.

The Torah in the Tarot by Stav Appel – available now

A beautiful Tarot deck and booklet revealing the lost and forgotten Jewish origins of the Tarotโ€”featuring a foreword by poet Ariana Reines.

For hundreds of years, the original meaning of the Tarot de Marseille, the artistic ancestor of the contemporary Tarot, has been a source of mystery, speculation, and debate. When Torah student Stav Appel encountered the Jean Noblet Tarot, one of the oldest preserved known versions of the Tarot de Marseille, he found something curious: the Magician held his arms in the shape of the Hebrew letter aleph ื, the Hermit wore a Jewish prayer shawl, and three pieces of matzah hid beneath the Moon. The meaning of these images became apparent when Appel learned that the deck was created circa 1650, during a centuries-long prohibition on Judaism in the Kingdom of France. 

In The Torah in the Tarot, Appel carefully analyzes the Noblet Tarot, uncovering a rich array of Jewish symbols ingeniously concealed in its images. Given the deckโ€™s origin during the Catholic Churchโ€™s campaign to abolish Judaism, Appel argues persuasively that its secret content suggests it originally served as a tool for clandestine Jewish education. Writing in a rich style that draws on rabbinic literary forms, Appel has presented a landmark contribution to the field of Tarot studiesโ€”revealing that when we perceive the Tarot through a Jewish lens, we can, at long last, recognize the Torah hidden in the Tarot.

The Torah in the Tarot includes a booklet written by Stav Appel with a foreword by Ariana Reines, as well as a historically accurate, 78-card color reproduction of the Jean Noblet Tarotโ€”the only modern copy that preserves the full scope of the deckโ€™s original Judaicaโ€”created by the French artist Florent Giraud of Tarotgraphe.

A Flag of No Nation – available on November 26th, 2024

“This is a living and essential book.”
โ€”sam sax, author of Bury It and Madness

A meditation on historical rupture and political imagination, A Flag of No Nation traces the stories of Turkish Jews in the twentieth century, navigating the tides of antisemitism, Turkish nationalism, Zionism, and the aftermath of the Ottoman Empire. Through forms of storytelling that range from allegory to oral history, Tom Haviv investigates the history of Israel|Palestine and the mythologies of nationalism, searching the archives for rituals and frames that might one day shape new realities of peace and justice. A warning against imperfect dreams, A Flag of No Nation reminds us how the act of remembrance can help us re-envision the future.

The Place of All Possibility by Adina Allen โ€” out July 30th, 2024

The Place of All Possibility is a paradigm-shifting work that reframes the whole of Torah as a contemporary guidebook for creativity. Drawing from the deep well of Jewish sacred texts, and the radical interpretive strategies of ancient rabbis, The Place of All Possibility provides teachings and tools for those who seek to employ creativity as a force of transformation. Putting spiritual wisdom in conversation with contemporary disciplines of art therapy, liberation theology, and creativity research, this essential book invites us all to rediscover our place in a world of mutual thriving. Packed with practical exercises to inspire your creative practice, The Place of All Possibility is for all peopleโ€”from any tradition or noneโ€”who want to seed a world of imagination, abundance, and joy.

Rimonim – available on November 26th, 2024

Rimonim is a richly woven tapestry of poetry meant for use. From a time of rupture and uncertainty, beloved movement poet Aurora Levins Morales brings us a prayer book for the street, for reconstituting the future through our gestures in the present. In these poems of devotion and protest, Levins Morales speaks across and through time with an undeniably prophetic voice. Written in collaboration with various communities looking to honor, unravel, and rebuild Jewish liturgies, Rimonim is a book of lyric in the most immediate senseโ€”of poems that are meant to be read and sung. Rooted in tradition and flowering in the tumultuous present, these poems will both accompany specific Jewish practices and offer inspiration for the sacred work of human liberation, where joy meets justice.

Ultimately, these forty-nine poems honor the forty-ninth year, when it was taught that everything in the land would begin anew, everything redistributed and freed, when the people would see that everything on this earth was “ready to wake and bloom / just under the skin of what is.”

Shop Publications

Wherever You Are: Essays from East to West

Wherever You Are: Essays from East to West gathers the meditations of a writer caught between worldsโ€”Palestinian by blood, American by circumstance, and by temperament a stranger to easy belonging.

October 21, 2025

Ayin Press is an independent publishing house and production studio rooted in Jewish culture and emanating outward. Ayin was founded on a deep belief in the power of culture and creativity to heal, transform, and uplift the world we share and build together.


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