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Knit One, Girl Two by Shira Glassman
Knit One, Girl Two by Shira Glassman









Knit One, Girl Two by Shira Glassman

In this, the second installment of Lerner’s popular “Lively St.

Knit One, Girl Two by Shira Glassman

Get it here.Įxtra Credit: See also Precious and Fragile Things and Switch. Her stories are as gorgeous as her language, and her backlist features women’s fiction as well as science fiction, horror, and erotica. Get it here.Ī strong Jewish heroine goes on an emotional journey, something that can easily be said about a lot of Hart’s books.

Knit One, Girl Two by Shira Glassman

Originally published in 2006, this was groundbreaking for its time, and it’s still worth the read. Yiddish becomes their love language, which they revert to when they need to speak to each other without anybody listening. The connection these characters have to Judaism is clear: our cowboy hero was raised by a Jewish goldminer in Colorado after he was orphaned our heroine’s paternal grandmother was Jewish. Our central characters help each other find a place where they belong and find love without judgement. In the meanwhile, she falls in love with a cowboy who always believed there was something more in life for him. The female protagonist of this book is a noble woman who searches for her larger purpose in life as she fights society to run a brewery left to her by her husband. When I shelved this book in 2009 at the bookstore I was working at, I cried.

Knit One, Girl Two by Shira Glassman

Let’s just say it involves a doctor, a secret baby, and a Hanukkah miracle. This is the second Jewish-themed book written by the pioneering Jewish author responsible for the first “own voices” contemporary romance featuring Jewish characters. Here’s a list of a few of my favorites, as well as a sneak peek of some exciting books being published soon. And now it was.īut don’t just take my word for what an amazing experience reading a romance novel written by Jewish authors about Jewish characters is. Before that, identifying with a character on a level beyond superficial details hadn’t been an option. Of course, the first time I read a Jewish character in a leading role of a romance novel? I cried.











Knit One, Girl Two by Shira Glassman