In this coming-of-age drama, three close friends struggle to understand faith, grief, and one another against the backdrop of their Orthodox Jewish community in the suburbs of Atlanta.
When Danny disappears, his best friends all process the loss in their own ways. Deenie shrouds herself in religion, Rae armors herself with rage, and Ellie, his first love and closest confidant, insists that he isn’t gone at all—indeed, she still sees him every day. Skillfully combining past and present timelines, Scheier tells a story about the occasionally contradictory natures of objective reality and emotional truth. Grief is shown in all its facets, and the girls, each weighed down by her own secrets, mourn individually as the topography of their friendship changes forever. As varied as its depictions of grief are the novel’s explorations of Jewish Orthodoxy. Each of the three main characters relates to her religious upbringing differently, and their parents, too, reflect a diversity of approaches to Jewish adulthood: Rae’s parents are largely tolerant of her unconventional choices, Deenie’s father is a beloved rabbi whom the youth of the community rely on for empathy and advice, and Ellie’s parents do their best to juggle their daughter’s desires against their own expectations for observance. Most characters are cued as White.
A compassionate and insightful exploration of the mysteries of imagination and the deeply personal nature of belief.
(glossary) (Fiction. 13-17)