

Exodus
A Memoir
Author: Deborah Feldman
Narrator: Deborah Feldman
Unabridged: 7 hr 28 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: Penguin Audio
Published: 03/25/2014
Author: Deborah Feldman
Narrator: Deborah Feldman
Unabridged: 7 hr 28 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: Penguin Audio
Published: 03/25/2014
Deborah Feldman was raised in the Satmar Hasidic community in the Williamsburg section of Brooklyn, New York. She attended Sarah Lawrence College and currently lives in New England with her son.
Full admission: although I marked this book as READ, I did not finish it. I just skipped through the fun parts, of Feldman with her various love interests. The book is actually well written, much more than the first book, and Feldman finally caught on to the modern memoir’s confessional style, so sh......more
When I read Deborah Feldman's first memoir Unorthodox I thought it was written pretty well, until about half to two-thirds of the way in. Then it kind of jumped up to hyperspeed, got vague and just kind of ended. To me it felt like she'd probably worked on that main material really well and then had......more
Because I was so intrigued by Unorthodox, of course I had to read the follow-up. I am pretty fascinated by people who decide to leave restrictive environments and make their way in the great big world. How do they find the courage to leave? How to they make it on their own? How do they handle the id......more
Such a poor book and extremely disappointing. Unorthodox was so good. This book does not follow at all.......more
Powerful. Exodus is a deeply moving, painful tale of self discovery and transformation. I am aware that Deborah Feldman's actions and books are very controversial, and people claim that she has lied and left out important details... While I could do research and doubt her writings, I'm not intereste......more
Praise for Exodus
“One woman's search to understand herself and her Jewish heritage. . . . Rich in details of Jewish life and the lives of her grandparents in the World War II era, [Feldman] sensitively portrays the inner struggles of accepting the pervasive feeling of survivor guilt and her own desires to understand the woman she was becoming. . . . An enthralling account of how one Orthodox Jewish woman turned her back on her religion and found genuineness and validity in her new life.”—Kirkus Reviews
“Feldman’s journey is undeniably and explicitly Jewish, but the aching need to find both a welcoming community and a sense of individuality is one that readers from all walks of life will be able to identify with. Those left unsatisfied with the abrupt ending to Unorthodox will enjoy the more hopeful conclusion to Feldman’s second book as well as her more mature and increasingly eloquent writing style.”—Booklist
“Overall, Exodus is a satisfying sequel to Unorthodox, which shows how Deborah Feldman went on to the next step after getting her own freedom from the bonds of a strictly insular society. . . . [A] chronicle of a continuing journey of self-discovery . . . There are many satisfying finds and revelations along the road, but there are also plenty of bumps, frustrations, disappointments, and pitfalls, which is expected when one spends their formative years being closed off from the rest of the outside world, and is confined to the boundaries of a Brooklyn neighborhood. . . . This book is more about the liberation of Deborah Feldman, and how she copes with this newfound sense of freedom and self-discovery, that can be a shock to some, or a declaration of independence for others.”—Stuart Nulman, Montreal Times
“In her first memoir, Unorthodox, Feldman made the courageous choice to cut off ties with her family and the Satmar community of Williamsburg, Brooklyn. . . . Now a divorced woman in her twenties, Feldman chronicles the next phase of her life in her new book [Exodus]. . . . A quest of self-discovery . . . Some of the most powerful scenes come when Feldman retraces the path of her female ancestors in Hungary and confronts the anti-Semitism of contemporary Europe. . . . Feldman ultimately discovers that her rightful place is wherever she happens to be.”—The New York Times Book Review