I have a hard time rating memoirs because I think they all deserve 5 stars as it’s not my story to rate… but anyways, this wasn’t so good that it’s on my favorites list but the author did an excellent job sharing their perspective in a clear, readable, way that kept me reading more. I do wish they went on to share more rather than share several sermons, however I connected with the author enough that I read them. A few related back to some of the anecdotes shared in the story, so I also understand the reasoning for using those to close out the book.
As a note, read a few reviews that seemed to be looking for more of a religious take or something, and wanted to be clear that I was reading from the perspective of learning about a person who has Autism through a Jewish lens, but wasn’t looking for a guide or anything to inform my own practice. While this author is not religious, there are still many touch points that are distinctly recognizable as Jewish, so if you can get over your own needs for G-d to be real, and just see it as a different perspective and/or read it for the larger Jewish aspects beyond G-d specific religion, it was very relatable and interesting.