The relationship between Walter Benjamin and Gershom Scholem is surely one of the extraordinary friendships of the twentieth century. It is not only that each–Benjamin as critic, Scholem as historian–was an innovative thinker of the first order, transforming the intellectual horizons of his field, or that they wrestled for twenty-five years over intellectual and spiritual issues that still seem urgent. It is also that, on a human level, the moral fiber of their friendship proved so tough and so resilient despite their drastically divergent paths, and despite the most soul-trying historical circumstances... The letters of Benjamin and Scholem are written out of a loneliness stoically sustained–not quite isolation, but the solitariness of genius pursuing its own way against the grain of the times, making 'radical demands' that political reality would not meet.–Robert Alter "New Republic"