Unorthodox

The Scandalous Rejection of My Hasidic Roots

paperback, 272 pages

Published Oct. 1, 2012 by Simon & Schuster.

ISBN:
978-1-4391-8701-2
Copied ISBN!

View on OpenLibrary

4 stars (9 reviews)

3 editions

Review of 'Unorthodox' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Seeing the author go from a sheltered child in a strict Hasidic background all of the limitations on knowledge and learning allowed her (particularly as a girl) to a self-confident adult who knows what she has missed and wants to teach her own children is freeing. My own family background is Lubavitche, but my grandmother gave it up before my uncle or father were born, and my grandmother didn't start living with us until she was in her late 70s (and I was a preteen or teenager), so we didn't talk much about what her background had been. This book was informative, and it reiterated my own values and doubt of doing things just because some religious authority thinks that you should!
Stages of her childhood growing up and into her marriage or enlightening and encouraging. It was clear from the beginning that she not have any room in her …

Review of 'Unorthodox' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

As a cultural artifact, this is a great document. As a literary memoir, it lacks nuance and self-awareness. The afterword, added years after the initial publication, does nothing to dispel the sense I got of a total lack of self-awareness.

A memoir is not just a recounting of events, it's a carefully crafted story, with reflection on past events and emotions. This book does not have that. Devorah refers to problematic statements and attitudes that she inhabited while a part of this community, but adds no reflection, makes no indication as to whether she still holds that attitudes. Most egregious are her terrible statements about other women's physical appearance, commenting on facial hair and calling girls ugly in a way that horrifies me to think she still maintains those views.

This book served a valuable role in breaking open the market for OTD memoirs, a valuable genre. On its own …

Review of 'Unorthodox' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

The internet didn't invent the cultural bubbles which surround each of us. I'm talking about those worldviews which only allow in what we want to see and filter out all the rest. Google famously structures our searches in this insular way.

What the internet did was automate insulation and intensify it and make it more obviously problematic. It made the world smaller which meant both more clashes with those who are different from us, and it made us huddle more tightly together to fight that difference. And it made us more aware of the bubble phenomenon. That's where we find ourselves today, living in a world that not only has alternative points of view but alternative facts.

This mistitled book tells the story of a particularly exotic bubble--that of the Satmars. I'm assuming you're not a Satmar because, if you were, what are you doing on the forbidden internet?
I …

avatar for caasn

rated it

3 stars
avatar for bobcatfish

rated it

5 stars
avatar for fynh

rated it

4 stars
avatar for SandraG

rated it

3 stars
avatar for Dvmheather

rated it

3 stars