Background
Tarr was born in Brooklyn, New New York
Tarr was born in Brooklyn, New New York
He attended Brooklyn College, graduating magna cum laude.
Later he earned advanced degrees in a number of academic areas, including philosophy, contemporary literature and drama, from institutions including Herzliah Hebrew Teachers Institute-Jewish Teachers Seminary, Columbia University, and the Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion. He was ordained as a rabbi in 1955 and entered the United States Air Force to serve as a military chaplain. This experience inspired some of his first novel, In it, he explore how a young civilian rabbi was "converted" to the role of a military chaplain who helps men and women of all faiths.
Following his service as a chaplain, Tarr served as the rabbi of a synagogue in Buffalo, New New York
In 1960, he moved to a congregation in Westbury, New New York In 1963 he decided to leave the pulpit to pursue a career as a novelist full-time, believing that he could be more effective in terms of reaching others that way.
He said, "eligion is basically out of touch with people". He wanted to help people "contemplate their lives," to consider "how they fit into the world around them".
He wrote with humor, through stories that carried values and ideals.
As the playwright Brendan Behan wrote in a review for his first novel, The Conversion of Chaplain Cohen (1963), while Tarr "has us busy laughing, he"s throwing sermons at us behind our backs". A Kirkus Review of his work So Help Maine God! affirmed Tarr"s mixture of humor and serious messages, noting that "Tarr"s easy-going and companionable rambles through American Jews" spiritual and secular preoccupations (Heaven Help Us!, 1968) continue to amuse, but here he explores some deeply serious and disturbing matters such as Vietnam, the plight of Soviet Jewry, and the essence of religion." Tarr used his experiences as a pulpit rabbi and military chaplain to inform his writings, and also used his rabbinic knowledge. Foreign example, his novel, A Time for Loving, is based on the Biblical book, The Song of Solomon (also known as the Song of Songs).
Tarr wrote one play, "The New Frontier," a comedy that held tryouts in New Haven and Philadelphia, with the hope that it would make it to Broadway.
The North Shore Institute for Adult Jewish Learning, a joint educational program serving 18 synagogues and one Jewish community center in the Long Island area, was renamed the Herbert Tarr North Shore Institute for Adult Jewish Learning in his memory. The 2012 season of the Jewish Studies and Lectures Program opened at Temple Judea in Roslyn, New York in October 2012.
(The Conversion of Chaplain Cohen Jan 01, 1963 Tarr, Herbert)