Bagels and Grits
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Publisher's Weekly Review ...
In an absorbing memoir, Moses (Food and Whine) describes her disorienting move from Washington, D.C., to Baton Rouge, a city home to a paltry 220 or so Jewish families. Moses, who had a strong Jewish identity but little connection to religious practice, found herself grappling with her new city's intense Christianity: just about everyone was on intimate terms with Jesus. Moses's move to Baton Rouge, coupled with her mother's deteriorating health, prompted her to study Hebrew and celebrate her bat mitzvah, which she had not done as a girl. Yet this book is not just a spiritual autobiography. It is also an account of a daughter struggling toward the end of her mother's life¿chemotherapy and cancer haunt every page. Moses's prose is lyrical and fresh: her daughter, for instance, is ¿so content within her skin that it's as if she'd been born with the soul of a shaman,¿ and Moses's childhood, in which tennis games, ski trips and her parents' cocktail parties all somehow culminated in Shabbat dinner, was ¿like living in a John Cheever novel edited by Isaac Bashevis Singer.¿ Moses has a vivid sense of humor and never takes herself too seriously. After finishing this book, readers may wish they could sit down over a bagel and grits and visit with her. (Oct.)
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General
Personal Memoirs
Biography
Jewish women
Jewish Studies