This is a very difficult and disturbing read, so be warned. It involves abuse on many levels, but in particular child abuse. It is not always described, but the circumstances carry your imagination to the darkest places. The fact that it is based on true events makes it even more so. Numerous times I questioned myself as to continue or not, but having started the story I wanted to see how it ended.
In a book of this type (dark and disturbing), I try to find some redeeming feature to keep me reading it. Perhaps, because it is based on true events, it was exposing the cruel nature of parts of humankind with which we are not familiar, or cultures and values so very different from our own. We are provided an opportunity to expand our knowledge of the hardships endured by those less fortunate, and to learn something of how to best help address these concerns.
The difficulty with this one is that the main characters, Daniella and Shlomie, did not start out in those places, those cultures, with those hardships. Shlomie, whose given name was Steven, is a middle class New Yorker, and Daniella, is also American born New-Yorker and raised in a wealthy family of jewellers, and she aspired to become a doctor. These two characters get together at a young age and move to Jerusalem, entering an ultra-Orthodox Jewish sect. Quite a turn of events from the innocent and hopeful lives of their younger selves.
The story seems to jump around in an effort to tie the present situation with past events. However, I found much of it to be repetitive, particularly the disturbing parts, and found it did not always add to moving the story forward. All in all, the writing was okay, but certainly not stellar. Perhaps the events coloured my perspective. It is still a worthwhile read, provided you have the stomach for that sort of story. I am still shaking my head.
Although I do not want to give anything away, the author's notes at the end were particular interesting as one of the cult leaders in the story flees the law, to Canada (Montreal in particular), where he is basically chased out after a few years to southern Ontario and then flees further to Central America. I recall this event in the news a few years ago, as a group of adults with fourteen children arrived in Chatham Ontario from Montreal, and then came down to the Windsor area and moved on to Central America. This certainly made the entire story much more real for me, as this took place in my backyard, so to speak.
It still remains for me a difficult book to rate. You can hardly call it a "good read", but I suppose at the very least it instills compassion in us for those who must suffer through such tragic events. I am nonetheless comfortable that I endured to the end, as the group of ultra-Orthodox Jews that moved through our area were reportedly fleeing intervention from the Children's Aid Society, with not too much other detail being provided in the news. This adds a dimension that was otherwise unknown.