Cut me loose : sin and salvation after my ultra-Orthodox girlhood
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Cut me loose : sin and salvation after my ultra-Orthodox girlhood
(Penguin books, . Memoir)
Penguin, 2015
- : [pbk.]
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Note
"With a new afterword"--P. [1] of cover
Description and Table of Contents
Description
"Visceral and uplifting." -- The Daily Beast
A raw and electrifying memoir about a young woman's journey from self-destruction to redemption, after cutting ties with her ultra-Orthodox Jewish family
For fans of the television series Unorthodox and Shtisel, this brutally honest memoir tells the story of one woman's quest to define herself as an individual. Leah Vincent was born into the Yeshivish community, an ultra-Orthodox Jewish sect. As the daughter of an influential rabbi, she was taught to worship two things: God, and the men who ruled their society.
Then, at sixteen, Leah was caught exchanging letters with a boy, violating religious law that forbids contact between members of the opposite sex. Shunned by her family, she was cast out of her home, alone and adrift in New York City, unprepared for the freedoms of secular life and unaccustomed to the power and peril inherent in her own sexuality. Fast-paced, harrowing, mesmerizing, and ultimately triumphant, Leah's story illuminates both the oppressive world of religious fundamentalism and the broader issues facing young women of all backgrounds.
by "Nielsen BookData"