What does it mean to be Jew(ish) in 2020? Caught between tradition and modernity, between a Jewish family and a non-Jewish son, Matt Greene ponders the big questions concerning identity, religion, family and Seinfeld. When his son was born to a non-Jewish mother, Matt began to consider the upbringing he'd put behind him--the sense of not belonging, the forbidden foods, the holidays that felt more like punishments. There are more types of Jew than there are bagel fillings, and for every two there are three opinions. But if you're not a black-hatted frummer, if you're allergic to groups, if you observe but don't believe, or you don't observe at all, does that make you less Jewish? In this wide-ranging series of essays, at turns irreverent, insightful, urgent and iconoclastic, Matt considers what might loosely be termed 'the modern Jewish experience', and asks what it means to be anything in a world obsessed with the self and the other.
Matt Greene Bücher
Matt Green ist ein Experte für Hochschulzulassungen, der sich dafür einsetzt, Studenten dabei zu helfen, einen Platz an ihrer Wunschuniversität zu bekommen. Sein tiefes Verständnis der medizinischen Welt, erworben durch sein Studium der Biochemie und seine postgraduale Forschung zur Entwicklung neuartiger Medikamente gegen Eierstockkrebs, verleiht seiner Arbeit eine einzigartige Dimension. Seit über sechs Jahren unterstützt Matt Studienplatzbewerber und nutzt seine Erkenntnisse, um sich im komplexen Zulassungsdschungel zurechtzufinden.


Growing up is hard enough without a deadline Alex's parents know something he doesn't. They know what's happening inside his head. Alex is more interested in what's happening outside it. He has homework to do and a marriage to save*. The clock is ticking. But there's still time to win the heart of Chloe Gower Laugh-out-loud funny and cry-out-loud sad, Ostrich is a book about what happens when you have to lift your head from the sand. * His parents'