Synopsis
Ruth Lehrer's memoir-in-thirty-six essays is a compelling contemplation about her life as a secular American Jewish woman. With humor and passion, she tells of her family's arrival in America in 1920, her Yiddishe Mama, Catskill vacations, Bar Mitzvahs, Christmas trees, war and peace, religion, God, and politics. She delights in books, theatre, and film with Jewish content, and laughs loudest at jokes told in Yiddish. When she hears of a crime, she prays that the perpetrator is not Jewish. A Judaica gift shop is her favorite place to browse.
About the Author
Ruth Lehrer began writing personal essays after she retired from her elementary school classroom in 1984. Some have appeared in Newsday, The New York Times, Chicago Tribune, Hadassah, Jewish Currents, The Reporter, Gluten-Free Living, and in the anthologies Mother of the Groom, Women Celebrate, and Chicken Soup for the Mom's Soul. Ruth has been married to Arthur for sixty years. They live in Queens, New York.
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