HomeGroupsTalkMoreZeitgeist
This site uses cookies to deliver our services, improve performance, for analytics, and (if not signed in) for advertising. By using LibraryThing you acknowledge that you have read and understand our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy. Your use of the site and services is subject to these policies and terms.

Results from Google Books

Click on a thumbnail to go to Google Books.

Loading...

An Unorthodox Match

by Naomi Ragen

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingMentions
11112256,298 (3.73)4
Showing 12 of 12
Thirty-four-year-old Leah (formerly Lola) Howard has had a tumultuous past. She was raised by her single mom, Cheryl, an atheist. Leah's fiancé, whom she adored, died tragically and she subsequently endured additional personal and professional tribulations that left her heartbroken. Her life has been capricious if not cruel, and Leah wonders if she will ever be happy again. She longs for stability, and gravitates towards the structure and spirituality of Orthodox Judaism. After taking the first steps towards her goal of becoming religiously observant, she consults Rabbi Weintraub of Boro Park, Brooklyn, about what to do next. She continues to pursue her Jewish studies; takes a job at a local yeshiva; and even volunteers to provide babysitting services for a widowed scholar. Much to her mother's displeasure, Leah dresses modestly, prays regularly, and keeps the Sabbath and other holy days.

Meanwhile, forty-year-old Yaakov Lehman, a Talmudic scholar, was widowed when his wife, Zissel Sara, died thirteen months earlier. Yaakov is in debt and three of his children—fifteen-year-old Shaindele, five-year-old Chasya, and fifteen-month-old Mordechai Shalom--are not coping well. Like a guardian angel, Leah Howard steps in, washing laundry, cooking, cleaning, and providing the Lehman children with much-needed affection. Unfortunately, Shaindele resents Leah's competence and close relationship with Chasya and Mordechai, and the teenager hatches a plan to rid her family of this do-gooder. When Yaakov and Leah decide they they have feelings for one another, they encounter fierce opposition among those who oppose the possible union of a Talmudic scholar and a ba'alas teshuva—a previously non-observant Jewish woman who returns to the fold.

Naomi Ragen sensitively and skillfully explores such hot-button issues as hypocrisy, bigotry, family dysfunction, the economic hardships confronting men who choose to study Torah instead of earning a living, and the stigma of mental illness. Leah is likeable and appealing but a bit too good to be true. She uses her degree in marketing to make a comfortable living and showers love on Mordechai Shalom and Chasya who, in turn, adore her. Ragen portrays Yaakov more realistically. He is conflicted, naïve, and until now, has relied on others, particularly his mother-in-law and Shaindel, to take care of the practical matters he neglects. Although "An Unorthodox Match" holds few surprises, the author insightfully describes Yaakov and Leah's hardships and determination to imbue their lives with meaning and holiness. She also exposes the selfishness, short-sightedness, and prejudice of certain sanctimonious individuals, but at the same time, lavishes praise on religious Jews who are virtuous, sincere, and welcoming towards their newly-observant brethren. This is an entertaining, poignant, humorous, and engrossing novel that looks behind the facade that many people adopt in order hide their character from public scrutiny. "An Unorthodox Match" should appeal to a wide audience, and will likely generate lively discussions among its readers.
( )
  booklover1801 | Aug 9, 2024 |
A predictable easy romance read about a 30 something Jewish woman who is unhappy with her single Manhattan life - she studies Judaism and becomes a Baal Tsuvah. Moving to Boro Park, Brooklyn she discovers the beauty of family life within the confines of the insular Hasidic community ( )
  bezap | Sep 25, 2021 |
Very enjoyable book. Always enjoy her books. ( )
  shazjhb | Sep 24, 2021 |
There's been a recent fascination with the lives of women in Orthodox Jewish communities, and this novel is set in the American center of that world, Boro Hall, Brooklyn. Jacob, a widower with five children, is struggling to continue his studies after the trauma of his wife's death. The community provides him with a helper, Leah, born Lola, who is of Jewish parentage but is considered a convert, as is any person raised outside the Orthodox community. Here, the restrictions of this life (dietary, behavioral, rigid dress codes and gender roles) pales in comparison to the terribly judgmental and critical actions of the allegedly pious community, featuring the actual shunning of anyone not born into this insular world. This reality is presented in contrast with the Torah instructions and rabbinical teachings, which urge acceptance, respect, and charity. The portrayal of the hypocrisy, as seen through the eyes of Jacob's mother-in-law, is vivid and revelatory. ( )
  froxgirl | Mar 31, 2021 |
A fun romance novel set in an orthodox Jewish community. I expected this book to take a serious look at people entering the Orthodox community and very soon I realized that this was a romance novel first and foremost and I would have to give up my expectations to enjoy the book. After I started looking at it like a Hallmark movie I really enjoyed it. ( )
  KamGeb | Jan 30, 2021 |
I did not care very much for the writing, nor for the coincidences that occurred. I also felt many of the characters' actions were not believable, but I did really care about the characters. I also was interested to learn so much about this observant community. ( )
  suesbooks | Aug 23, 2020 |
Compelling plot; engaging pacing, characters, timing, and dialogue add up to a very good read.

Ragen describes the good and bad of both the secular and religious worlds, allowing some of the characters to act as 'the critical judges.' Cheryl Howard, Leah's mother is the judge against the ultra-orthodox, while Shaindele, grandmother Fruma Esther, the matchmakers, and many other members in the ultra-orthodox community are the judges against the secular world, and against fully accepting sincere Baalei T'shuvim (those who 'return' to orthodoxy).

The path from secularlism to orthodoxy is not for the weak. One must be passionately committed to learning a remarkably new way of seeing the world; to changing one's life-style, behavior, dress, food, and more.

It takes Leah years to make this committment.to the ultra-orthodox way of life where she hopes to find a loving husband and start a family. But the cynical, hypercritical matchmakers match her up with awful candidates that insult her intelligence, embarrass and anger her. Why did they even bother; did they think she thought herself as worthless as they considered her?

But Leah attracts many friends and supporters who help her reach her well-deserved goals.

I definitely recommend this book!
  Bookish59 | Jul 15, 2020 |
Baal t’shevah means one who has returned. In this novel, Lola, is longing for something more. After growing up in a non-religious house, she finds herself looking for something more which leads her to a Hasidic community in New York. Jacob is newly widowed and trying to continue being a Torah scholar and a father. When Lola becomes his new housekeeper, they discover what they’ve both been looking for.
  HandelmanLibraryTINR | Oct 31, 2019 |
I have been a fan of Naomi Ragen’s books for many years. I loved all of her earlier books, until around 2010. The three books after that date I did not care for. But I still am a fan and am thrilled to report that I LOVED “An Unorthodox Match”. This is a beautiful story of faith, love, forgiveness, second chances, and acceptance.

“An Unorthodox Match” is set in Borough Park, Brooklyn, home to one of the largest Orthodox Jewish communities outside Israel. Yaakov, a devout Talmud scholar, is struggling to care for his five children after the death of his beloved wife. Recognizing that he is not coping well at all he finally accepts that he must look for a new wife so he contacts the local matchmakers.

Leah feels like a fish out of water in Borough Park. Understandable as she grew up as Lola, a secular Jew, knowing very little about the traditions of her faith. But after the death of her fiancé she turns to the faith she learned from her observant Jewish grandparents and decides to become a baal teshuva, a returnee to the faith, and joins the ultraorthodox neighborhood in Borough Park. She is looking for the structure the ultraorthodox lifestyle provides. Leah has many obstacles to overcome – primary being her mother’s insistence that she is ruining her life, and the non-acceptance by the Borough Park residents. As an act of mercy she volunteers to go to Yaakov’s home to care for the younger children and to tidy their home.

When Yaakov and Leah finally meet they are immediately attracted to each other but their match is considered – well, unorthodox. The matchmakers disapprove. Yaakov’s 15-year-old daughter Shaindele resents Leah’s visits to their home. Ragen’s portrayal of Shaindele is truly heart-breaking. After her mother’s death, Shaindele’s childhood is over. She must now take care of the younger children, clean the house, do the laundry, and do some cooking. And she still must attend school and do her homework. Shaindele resents that Leah can do all this and she couldn’t. The mother-in-law disapproves of Leah. So how can Yaakov and Leah possibly be together? I loved Yaakov and Leah so much I wanted them to just ignore all this, but that they could not do that.

I found this is be a complex story, as life itself is complex. Ragen dishes up the good, bad, and the ugly. While presenting the beautiful side of Orthodox Judaism she also exposes the ugly side. Like any community, those are those who are cruel and judgmental, and those who are kind, loving, and generous. This was an intimate look inside a very insular community, a community that follows a very strict code of conduct. I am sure that some readers will probably be offended by the rules of the community, but this is their way of life. This book is full of great characters, some being very minor in the story. Ragen writes of the parent-child upheavals after the death of one of the parents. The struggle Yaakov and Leah have with their faith and their community was poignant. Above all, a well written book should evoke emotions in its reader. This book did just that – I felt compassion, anger, fear, and joy.

Note: The cover has nothing to do with the story inside. This is a clean romance between two Orthodox people.

Thank you to Jordan Hanley at St. Martin's Press for the advance reading copy. All opinions expressed are my own. ( )
  BettyTaylor56 | Sep 21, 2019 |
I started off not liking this book. I did not like the author's depiction of feminists as superficial, narrow-minded, and not very bright. She did this by the way she painted the minor character Cheryl Howard, mother of the central character Leah Howard. Cheryl is very rejecting of Leah's plan to move to Boro Park, Brooklyn N.Y., and become a member of an Orthodox Jewish community there. But despite all her mother's arguments and fears, Leah does just that, hoping to embrace, and be embraced by, the religious life and culture of her grandparents, a life her mother had left behind.
I have to say, this book definitely grew on me. As Leah attempts to find a role for herself in her new community, she begins to understand that sometimes the "piously stringent were vicious". She finds herself a victim of the rumor-mongers among the most orthodox, and to be found wanting for her appearance, her newness to the community, and her past. While Leah had been tired of the dominant culture, of being ogled by men, at the casualness about sex, now she finds that the opposite values can be just as harmful and hurtful. She faces judgementalism, rigidity, and arrogance. At one point she says "I used to think religious people were kinder, nicer, had better character". She sees now that too often that is not the case.
But there are still those in this community that truly want to practice their faith, to be accepting, to show love. There are several quotes from the Torah that remind us that we are to "not oppress or ill treat the stranger" or even "to love the stranger among us", and other quotes that lay bare the wrongness in how Leah has been treated and perceived.
This was at it's heart a love story, but the author encases the romance of the story within an exploration of an ultra orthodox Jewish community, and a look at the often buried meanings of faith. ( )
1 vote jhoaglin | Jun 15, 2019 |
I have been reading Naomi Ragen novels for twenty years, since my mom recommended Jephte's Daughter to me. She always tells an engaging story, with interesting characters and very human dilemmas to solve. They are set among the orthodox Jewish community. Her newest, An Unorthodox Match, does not disappoint.

The story is about a a young widower, Yaakov, with five children. After a year of struggling emotionally and financially since his young wife's untimely death he realizes that he needs to find a new wife. In his community lives a young unmarried convert (although born Jewish) to orthodoxy, Leah. After losing her fiancé in an accident Leah is trying to find her life's purpose in that Orthodox community in Boro Park, Brooklyn where Yaakov resides. She too needs a new partner and strongly desires to be a mother. She volunteers to help others and becomes the part time baby sitter to Yaakov's youngest two children. They adore her. But also living in the home is a sixteen year old daughter who resents Leah and does whatever she can to sabotage the arrangement. Also figuring prominently (and a bit humorously) in the story is the role and purpose of the shadchan (matchmaker) in the orthodox community. And then there is Yaakov's mother-in-law, who wants Yaakov to remarry but lives with regret and self blame for her family's woes.

Regan explores the many forces that are against Yaakov and Leah coming together. She also inserts a bit of a mystery as to what actually lead to the death of Yaakov's first wife and skillfully deals with the issue towards the end of the book. Regan, as she always does, enhances her work with a more general exploration of faith in god and religious purpose. It is beautifully written and a compelling read.

You will find a glossary at the end that defines the many Yiddish terms used throughout the book. If I have any quibble it is that a number of terms were not included, despite being italicized in the text. Since I read an early review copy, perhaps the final glossary will be expanded. Although I knew many of the terms, I knew far from all, so the glossary was very helpful. ( )
  Micheller7 | May 23, 2019 |
I have read many books by Naomi Ragen in the past and she's one of my favorite Jewish authors and of Jewish fiction. It is always a pleasure to read her books.

Growing up Jewish but not ultra religious like this, I really enjoyed learning a lot about things I didn't know in my own religion. Thankfully there was a glossary of words, especially some Yiddish ones that I didn't grow up with to help me after I finished the book.

Leah is a 34 year old woman who was raised a Jew but her mother didn't want her to do anything with being one -- she wanted her to be free -- just like her. Leah had heartaches in her life and wanted to become a religious woman. She ends up watching a widower's three children who she falls in love with and them with her (except for the 15 year old) and eventually falls in love with him. He only knows her of the caretaker of his children (he was either studying or at school studying to be a CPA. He also has been living with grief and guilt since his wife died of "an illness." It was easy to recognize to me and it was sad and it wasn't mentioned throughout the book until the end. ( )
  sweetbabyjane58 | Apr 8, 2019 |
Showing 12 of 12

Current Discussions

None

Popular covers

Quick Links

Rating

Average: (3.73)
0.5
1 1
1.5
2 3
2.5 2
3 2
3.5 3
4 10
4.5 3
5 6

Is this you?

Become a LibraryThing Author.

 

About | Contact | Privacy/Terms | Help/FAQs | Blog | Store | APIs | TinyCat | Legacy Libraries | Early Reviewers | Common Knowledge | 213,712,819 books! | Top bar: Always visible