Such a thoughtful exploration of "women's work" from an Orthodox feminist perspective. I give major props to Ner-David's authentic wrestling with text, history, sexism and meaning. And I felt humbled as I read: I can be a judgy fuckhead, and I wish I were as open-hearted as Ner-David seems to be. She explores traditional Orthodoxy, fairly radical egalitarian feminism and a lot of space in between. (At one point she sounds like the most traditional challah-baking Erev-Shabbat-sweating matron, and at another she's having hot sex outdoors at night at a public hot spring with her husband after she's pointed out the sexist aspects of the current usual world of mikvah immersion so the two of them have both created their own sexism-stripped mikveh experiences, to which I can only say YOU GO, GIRL.) She's extremely well-read and knowledgable about both Tanach and commentary, but she also believes that the personal is political -- people can find meaning in all kinds of ritual and action, large and small. It's cool that I can feel a kinship for a woman with a very different relationship to religion than my own, someone who has seven kids and lives on a kibbutz...but I do. Thanks to my colleague Liel at Tablet for pointing me toward this one.