Never Mind The Goldbergs

by Matthue Roth

Paperback, 2006

Status

Available

Call number

FIC ROT YA

Tags

Collection

Publication

Push (2006), Edition: First Printing, Paperback, 368 pages

Description

A seventeen-year-old Orthodox Jewish girl leaves her home in New York for the summer to film a television show in California.

User reviews

LibraryThing member ewyatt
Hava finds herself suddenly hired as Shoshona on a sitcom about a Jewish family. Hava finds she is the only Orthodox Jew on the show. She leaves NYS to spend the summer before her senior year of high school shooting the series in LA. She thinks a lot about her religion and what it means to her as
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she tries to grow into the role of being an actress, being in Hollywood, and staying true to herself. There are colorful characters she meets along the way. Some of the plot requires suspension of disbelief and even though Hava is described in detail throughout the book, she remained a bit mysterious and I couldn't quite figure her out.
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LibraryThing member Narshkite
I want to give this more than 3-stars, but just can't. The urge to up the stars comes from my happiness that this book exists. A book coming from the perspective of a 21st Century Modern Orthodox Jewish teen is something I have not seen before, and had not realized I was missing. I liked Hava a
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great deal, and thought the book was at its best when in focused on her inner thoughts and her relationships with her best friends Ian and Moish. But there was a lot here that did not work, and some of it was so clunky and immature it kind of ruined the rest. The unacknowledged creepiness of Hava's relationship with Charles, the weirdly contrived live action sex tape scene (why on Earth would Charles have done that, and did he get the show crew to set it up?), the absurd and cloying "osser" baby (this was not a book that needed a Greek chorus of any kind, let alone a baby.) The whole ending with the producers was absurd and just bad, and played into the Elders of Zion myth that behind the curtain there are a bunch of Jews controlling everything. I was baffled by the eventual centrality of Hava's fractured relationship with her mother which was not even mentioned for the first half of the book, and not ever properly set up (unless you count a sudden exposition on how bad the relationship is as a set up.) I went and read some of Roth's later online stuff and its better. This is a man in need of a workshop, but there is a lot of raw talent and as a secular Jew who has chosen to join an orthodox community Roth brings an interesting perspective. I hope he writes more.
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