: A carpenter is haunted after crafting a violin from the wood of a coffin.

In the crooked alleys of Prague’s Josefov, where gaslights flicker like nervous candles, there lived a scribe named Eliezer ben Yonah. He was a pale, gaunt man with ink-stained fingers and a soul too tender for his trade. By day, he copied holy texts for the synagogue. By night, he wrote something else entirely: a secret megillah , a scroll that told the true story of Lilith—not as the demon of the cradle, but as the shadow cast by Adam’s first mistake.

She stepped closer, and Eliezer saw that her feet did not touch the floor.

Do not be afraid.

Lilith's Cave has become an integral part of Jewish culture, inspiring artistic expressions, literary works, and even influencing Jewish rituals and traditions. The cave serves as a metaphor for the unknown, representing the complexities and mysteries of human existence.

For centuries, Jewish storytelling has been a vessel for wisdom, faith, and moral instruction. But hidden beneath the surface of well-known parables and holiday tales lies a shadowy, thrilling tradition—one of dybbuks, demons, curses, and the undead. is a landmark collection that brings these forgotten, whispered stories back into the light.

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