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You could fairly describe this as "Good Omens but Jewish", but its interest in the shtetl and immigrant experience and its lower-stakes more localized plot both give it a tighter focus that it benefits from greatly. This is a story about Jews, of course, but it's also a very Jewish story, all about the intersections between life and morality and religion, the way the world bends itself around people and the way people bend themselves into the world.