I needed a Jewish tour guide when reading this book.
It's the story of two separate teenage girls in Russia in 1875 who both find their family situations untenable so they run away to London, only to discover that unaccompanied teenage girls in London are fair game. They start to pull themselves up from the gutter, meet each other and live together in London for a short while, then one runs away again in hopes of bettering their lives, only to find things can go south again.
It seemed that every single character in this book was Jewish and that permeates the story. But what was confusing was that both of these girls "see" and talk with with dead grandmothers on a regular basis. Is that some sort of Jewish tradition? A literary device to allow the author to dispense motherly information / guilt? An indication that the girls were going insane from their fear and loneliness and guilt?
Also, I nearly quit reading the book during the first and second chapters, but I finally realized that, in chapter 3, the two girls' lives would intertwine and it might get more interesting. Then I hung in there for the big clash that I anticipated but which never came.
My favorite character was the Jewish grandfather, Zaydeh, who acted senile but was observant and wise.