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Hope Is My House: The Revealing Autobiography of a Woman Who Defied Home and Heritage to Discover Love and Dedication in a New Land
Devorah Wigoder

Hope Is My House: The Revealing Autobiography of a Woman Who Defied Home and Heritage to Discover Love and Dedication in a New Land

Prentice-Hall (1966)
282 pages
Dewey * 203.85
LC Classification Adult
LC Control No. 66022101

Genre

  • Adult / Nonfiction / Autobiography / Memoir / Letters

Plot

THe story of how Catholic, Irish-American Jane Emmet MacDwyer becomes Israeli citizen Devorah Emmet Wigoder holds an inherent fascination for such a total conversion has its novelty. In this spirited spiritual autobiography, Mrs. Wigoder moves from her early Catholic years to her revulsion at social injustice, her embracing of Judaism, and her subsequent contentment. It's a zealous, well-rendered, sturdy manifesto of traditional Jewish faith. Mrs. Wigoder is gifted with humor, a flair for the dramatic, and an infectious confidence. The first half of her book, which includes her experiences at acting school, with racial prejudice in Atlanta, and the heartbreak of her family's ostracism, is the better. As the narrative continues into her Jewish years, it takes a contemplative turn which tends to slow it down. Quite critical of American dollar worship and social inequitites, she finds in Israel the joys of agrarian life and the commitment to ethical conduct she had sought from an early age. Mrs. Wigoder is a strong and gifted woman and retains her American go-getter spirit. THis quality, plus her fervor, mayput off readers of lower-keyed taste, while those who warm to her warmth may be disappointed by the latter, more impersonal part of the book.. These obstacles aside, she has written a generally absorbing, at times, loquent, story.

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Added Date Jan 05, 2016 18:24:47
Modified Date Jul 18, 2022 19:22:46