Wednesday, November 19, 2008
 
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Main » Jewish » Website Details
Submitted by:Totanaca at: 8/13/2008 under: "Jewish".
41 of 56 people found the following review helpful: Funny, poignant, and very readable, October 7, 2007 By Debra Hamel (TwitterLit.com) - See all my reviews This review is from: Foreskin's Lament: A Memoir (Hardcover) Shalom Auslander grew up in the 1970s and 80s in Monsey, New York, in an Orthodox Jewish family, with all that entailed: the arcana of kosher dietary restrictions; the uniform of the Orthodox Jew--tzitzis and peyis and yarmulke; the mind-numbing boredom of Sabbath, when most worthwhile human activitiy is forbidden by Jewish law. "It was forbidden to watch TV, it was forbidden to write, it was forbidden to draw, it was forbidden to color. It was forbidden to play with trains because they used electricity. It was forbidden to play with Legos because it was considered building. It was forbidden to play with Silly Putty because if you pressed it against a newspaper it would transfer some of the ink to itself, and so it was considered printing." More specifically, Auslander grew up in an unhappy Orthodox Jewish family. His father was belligerent and volatile and given to threats involving amputation. His mother wallowed in misery and home decorating. It's hardly surprising that in adulthood Auslander has complicated relationships with both his family and God, the latter an angry entity who, much like Auslander's father, specializes in inconsistent and disproportionate punishments. But Auslander still believes. He believes, for example, that God keeps a particularly careful eye on his misdemeanors, and he is always expecting God to screw him over.
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