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Miriam
Iris Rosofsky

Miriam

Harper & Row (Aug 01, 1988)
9780060248536
188 pages
Dewey * YA Fic 568 Ro
LC Classification Young Adult
LC Control No. 87045859

Genre

  • Young Adult / Literature / Fiction

Subject

  • 601 Jewish Community: Society & Arts / Society / Social Behavior & Institutions / Social History

Plot

From Publishers Weekly
This finely wrought first novel explores the equivocal experience of growing up female in a strongly patriarchal Jewish family. Miriam has always felt a kinship with her younger brother, Moshe, despite the preferential treatment he receives from her parents. She derives peace from the rituals of her religion in spite of her emerging questions about its tenets and its view of women as inferior citizens. These opposing sentiments shape Miriam's development in this coming-of-age story that includes her conflicts with friends and family, her need to come to terms with Moshe's sudden death and, by the end, her burgeoning independence. Rosofsky's first-person narrative remarkably represents events precisely as a child might perceive them. Accurately rendered are both the naive, incomplete perceptions of her protagonist at age four and the increasingly analytical, complex observations of Miriam as an adolescent. Because this novel asks difficult questions and resists easy answers, it accumulates a quiet but compelling force. A Charlotte Zolotow Book. Ages 12-up.

Personal

Owner Fiction
Index 3729
Added Date Jan 05, 2016 18:03:01
Modified Date Jul 18, 2022 19:21:56