Margie's Reviews > Dinners with Ruth: A Memoir on the Power of Friendships

Dinners with Ruth by Nina Totenberg
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bookshelves: friendship, family, memoir, strong-women, united-states-history

3 stars

I was interested in this book because of the author's long friendship with Ruth Bader Ginsburg. There is a nice photo on the front of the book of the two of them. However, I neglected to pay attention to the subtitle following "Dinners with Ruth." The subtitle is "A Memoir on the Power of Friendships." (Note "friendships," not "friendship.")

Although I did finish the book, it took me a while because I had to keep flipping back and forth to find various details. Here are some of the reasons that I gave it only three stars:

1. The main part of the title, "Dinners with Ruth," in bold, gold letters leaps out at one and obscures the real subject of the book, Nina Totenberg's many friendships and life stories. I wanted to read about dinners (and conversations) with RBG which definitely was not the main topic of the book.

2. The book is not chronological; I hate that, especially in non-fiction books. I realize this is a memoir and the chapter titles do state their subject matter, but the book made my head swim trying to follow the timeline which changed in every chapter.

3. Not enough photos of Ruth Bader Ginsburg, even though there were many photos of the author, her family and friends. I would have loved to have seen more photos of RBG, especially when she was young, but maybe they weren't available?

What I liked:

1. The actual conversations with Ruth Bader Ginsburg, the stories of her life and her long friendship with Nina Totenberg (almost fifty years).

2. The background and stories about the Supreme Court, the justices and some of the cases they deliberated were very interesting. Nina Totenberg has been the NPR correspondent covering the Supreme Court since 1975.

3. The story of the stolen Stradivarius violin that belonged to Totenberg's father, Roman Totenberg, "a virtuoso violinist," and recovered after thirty-five years was a great story which Totenberg aired on NPR. Again, nothing to do with RBG, but an interesting part of Totenberg's memoir.

4. Nice table of contents (which I didn't glance at before I started the book, so that's on me), great notes at the end of the book of her quotes, photos and sources, great index, nice acknowledgments.

5. Some lovely quotes, including this one in the Prologue, p.xiii, from Shakespeare's Richard II: "I count myself in nothing else so happy, / As in a soul remembering my good friends." Another longer quote from the wedding ceremony that RBG performed for Totenberg and her second husband, David Reines (a trauma surgeon, health consultant and friend of RBG) is copied below.

I think if the book's title had been "A Memoir on the Power of Friendships," I would have given it a higher rating. However, I might not have read the book either. Because the main part of the title was "Dinners with Ruth" (in big, gold letters as I mentioned), it was not what I expected. It was an interesting and informative book overall, albeit a bit gossipy (which I don't mind), but it wasn't what I envisioned when I glanced at the title. Note to self: read the entire title and the table of contents, if available, before starting books!

Here is a quote that I loved from Ruth Bader Ginsburg's marriage ceremony for Nina Totenberg and David Reines, p.172:

"Before we broke the glass, a central part of a traditional Jewish wedding, Ruth noted that this 'symbolic step reminds us, at the very time we celebrate the construction of a marriage, of the fragility of relationships and of life. We break the glass too as an audible, tangible reminder of those who are not with us to share our joy, but whose voices we can hear and whose presence we can feel. We think of all those we have loved and still love, and it is the eternalness of that love that brings them to this place at this time. Our remembrances do not detract from our joy, but reinforce it.'"
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Reading Progress

January 5, 2023 – Started Reading
January 14, 2023 – Finished Reading
January 16, 2023 – Shelved

Comments Showing 1-7 of 7 (7 new)

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message 1: by Lisa (new) - added it

Lisa Vegan Margie, I just saw your review. I go through every single email but I don’t expect much from them but every week I go through and I look at every single activity on my homepage and I did not see your review. I’m going to have to go back to going to a lot of my friends’ profile pages.

We had talked about the book a little and you had told me about it so I’m not surprised you didn’t rate it higher but I love the details you gave here. It’s a superb review. Thank you. It does sound interesting. I do love the symbolism of the breaking of the glass at Jewish weddings.


Margie Lisa wrote: "Margie, I just saw your review. I go through every single email but I don’t expect much from them but every week I go through and I look at every single activity on my homepage and I did not see your review. I’m going to have to go back to going to a lot of my friends’ profile pages.

We had talked about the book a little and you had told me about it so I’m not surprised you didn’t rate it higher but I love the details you gave here. It’s a superb review. Thank you. It does sound interesting. I do love the symbolism of the breaking of the glass at Jewish weddings...."


Thank you, Lisa! I ended up liking it more than I did at the beginning, but I would have liked more about RBG. Yes, I love the symbolism of breaking a glass at Jewish weddings and was glad to have it explained. There was also a funny bit in the book that I liked about the author's future mother-in-law who complained before the wedding that the ceremony wasn't going to be performed by a rabbi. Her son said, "Mom, our wedding is being performed by a Supreme Court Justice, Ruth Bader Ginsburg - and she's Jewish!" His mom still wasn't satisfied!

I know you and I never get each other's reviews on our email feed and it's very frustrating. I have complained to GR, just as you have, numerous times to no avail! Even the notifications I do get for other reviews are three or four days late. At least we both understand why we are late reading and liking each other's reviews!


message 3: by Lisa (new) - added it

Lisa Vegan Margie wrote: "There was also a funny bit in the book that I liked about the author's future mother-in-law who complained before the wedding that the ceremony wasn't going to be performed by a rabbi. Her son said, "Mom, our wedding is being performed by a Supreme Court Justice, Ruth Bader Ginsburg - and she's Jewish!" His mom still wasn't satisfied! ."

Margie, I love that!

We do understand. What I worry about more is when I don’t get notifications about comments on reviews. I think I eventually see most reviews. Sometimes I’m afraid I never see comments and I don’t want to look as though I’m being rude. Experienced members probably know what’s going on but there are a lot of members who don’t know Goodreads that well or who are brand new here.


Margie Lisa wrote: "What I worry about more is when I don’t get notifications about comments on reviews. I think I eventually see most reviews. Sometimes I’m afraid I never see comments and I don’t want to look as though I’m being rude...."

Same, Lisa! I think I am often not notified of comments and then look rude not answering them! It's very frustrating!


message 5: by Lisa (new) - added it

Lisa Vegan Margie wrote: "Same, Lisa! I think I am often not notified of comments and then look rude not answering them! It's very frustrating! ."

Margie, When this happens it also ruins so many of the great conversations we have at reviews.


message 6: by Gerry (new)

Gerry Margie The title certainly sounds like an oxymoron to me, even with that subtitle and from that title I would have expected a number of photographs of Ruth and perhaps not so many of the author, unless at the dining table with Ruth!


message 7: by Margie (last edited Feb 13, 2023 06:03PM) (new) - rated it 3 stars

Margie There are some of Ruth, including at dinner, just not enough, Gerry. I wanted to see some of her in her younger days. Also, I wanted to read more about Ruth, but that wasn't the focus of the book according to the subtitle, so my mistake in not reading the subtitle more closely I guess!


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