A family is torn apart by fierce belief and private longing in this unprecedented journey deep inside the most insular Hasidic sect, the Satmar.
In 1939, five-year-old Josef witnesses the murder of his family by the Romanian Iron Guard. He is taken in by a Gentile maid, who raises him as her own son. Five years later, Josef rescues a young girl, Mila, whose parents are killed in the wake of Nazi deportations. Josef helps Mila find safety with Zalman Stern, a leader in the Satmar community, in whose home Mila is raised as a sister to Zalman's daughter, Atara. The two girls form a fierce bond, but as they mature, Atara feels trapped by the restraints of Jewish fundamentalism, while Mila embraces her faith and her role as a respected young woman in her community. When Josef returns and chooses Mila to be his bride, she eagerly strives to be an ideal wife, but a desperate choice after ten years of childless marriage threatens to separate her from everything-and everyone-she cherishes.
A beautifully crafted, emotionally gripping story of what happens when unwavering love, unyielding law, and centuries of tradition collide, I Am Forbidden announces the arrival of an extraordinarily gifted new voice and opens a startling window on a world long closed to most of us, until now.
ANOUK MARKOVITS grew up in France, in an ultra-orthodox Satmar home. She attended a religious seminary in England instead of high school, and left the fold at the age of nineteen to avoid an arranged marriage. She went on to receive a bachelor of science from Columbia University, a master of architecture from Harvard, and a PhD in Romance Studies from Cornell. Translations of I Am Forbidden are forthcoming in a dozen countries. Markovits's first novel, Pur Coton, written in French, was published by Gallimard.
Show moreA family is torn apart by fierce belief and private longing in this unprecedented journey deep inside the most insular Hasidic sect, the Satmar.
In 1939, five-year-old Josef witnesses the murder of his family by the Romanian Iron Guard. He is taken in by a Gentile maid, who raises him as her own son. Five years later, Josef rescues a young girl, Mila, whose parents are killed in the wake of Nazi deportations. Josef helps Mila find safety with Zalman Stern, a leader in the Satmar community, in whose home Mila is raised as a sister to Zalman's daughter, Atara. The two girls form a fierce bond, but as they mature, Atara feels trapped by the restraints of Jewish fundamentalism, while Mila embraces her faith and her role as a respected young woman in her community. When Josef returns and chooses Mila to be his bride, she eagerly strives to be an ideal wife, but a desperate choice after ten years of childless marriage threatens to separate her from everything-and everyone-she cherishes.
A beautifully crafted, emotionally gripping story of what happens when unwavering love, unyielding law, and centuries of tradition collide, I Am Forbidden announces the arrival of an extraordinarily gifted new voice and opens a startling window on a world long closed to most of us, until now.
ANOUK MARKOVITS grew up in France, in an ultra-orthodox Satmar home. She attended a religious seminary in England instead of high school, and left the fold at the age of nineteen to avoid an arranged marriage. She went on to receive a bachelor of science from Columbia University, a master of architecture from Harvard, and a PhD in Romance Studies from Cornell. Translations of I Am Forbidden are forthcoming in a dozen countries. Markovits's first novel, Pur Coton, written in French, was published by Gallimard.
Show moreANOUK MARKOVITS grew up in France, in an ultra-orthodox Satmar home. She attended a religious seminary in England instead of high school, and left the fold at the age of nineteen to avoid an arranged marriage. She went on to receive a bachelor of science from Columbia University, a master of architecture from Harvard, and a PhD in Romance Studies from Cornell. Translations of I Am Forbidden are forthcoming in a dozen countries. Markovits's first novel, Pur Coton, written in French, was published by Gallimard.
“The wonder of this elegant, enthralling novel is the beauty Ms.
Markovits unearths in the Hasidic community she takes us into. Ms.
Markovits, big-hearted and surprising, tenderly captures the
complexities of adulthood for the one who stayed.... I Am Forbidden
whips by, its extravagant narrative steadily cast with complicated,
thoughtful characters.”
—Susannah Meadows, The New York Times
"Anouk Markovits's portrayal of the contradictions and compromises
of Hasidic faith is fascinating."
—Times Literary Supplement
“Markovits makes her stamp on the literary world with an ambitious,
religiously-centered debut. [T]his ambitious, revelatory novel
richly rewards your efforts and heralds a promising new
writer.”
—Entertainment Weekly
“A captivating tale.”
—People
“Markovits’s heroines are disenfranchised but resourceful,
possessing an innate spirituality, despite, or perhaps because of,
the freedom denied them.”
—New Yorker
“A lyrical novel about obedience, rebellion and tragedy by an
author who grew up in the Hasidic community she writes about. With
poetic grace, she succeeds at depicting the culture from the inside
out, conveying the way in which a life of limitation and law can
provide a bulwark of meaning.”
—Ilana Teitelbaum, Huffington Post
“Anouk Markovits’s I Am Forbidden contrasts the fates of a Hasidic
family’s two daughters, one who breaks with tradition to pursue a
life of intellectual and emotional freedom, the other who cleaves
to convention only to find her childless marriage is leading her to
consider a course of action that falls well outside her religious
beliefs.”
—Megan O’Grady, Vogue
“[A] story that will resonate with anyone who's ever bucked family
expectations to find their own way of life.”
—Oprah.com
“Markovits brings off this balancing act with skill and daring.
Everyone is given their due. Instead of disrespect or easy
judgment, there is generosity of spirit and delicacy of the pen…
This is a book absorbing as any midrash and as enlightening as a
library. I feel its contribution immediately and powerfully, and am
happy to have given my time to it. I recommend you do the
same.”
—Unpious
“A deeply felt account of people caught between worlds.”
—The Jewish Daily Forward, Shoshana Olidort
“In Anouk Markovits’s outstanding novel, the title words
could apply to many scenarios within its pages: cultures,
relationships, and expectations all provide constant obstacles to
either rise above or muddle through. There are many delicate
balancing acts, and through it all, Markovits’s characters shine
through with determination and intelligence.”
—Historical Novel Society
“Tracing the Stern family from Transylvania to Paris and Brooklyn,
[Markovits] focuses on daughter Atara and adopted daughter Mila,
closer than close, until Atara wants more than the Satmar world can
offer. Markovits plays fair: the believers are not stupid; their
harsh world has beauty. We dwellers in the modern world know what
“should” happen, but Markovits shows why, for those in the other
world, it’s not that simple.”
—Publishers Weekly (starred review)
“Markovits creates a vibrant, multilayered tale set within the
conflicting obligations of faith and family."
—Booklist
“Orphaned during the Holocaust, two ultra-orthodox Jews bound by
love and faith are driven apart by the same forces in a sensitive
consideration of tradition and commitment. [A] sober, finely etched
scrutiny of extreme belief set in a female context.”
—Kirkus
“Markovits immediately draws the reader in to a family saga of
faith and longhidden secrets, set among the Hasidic Jews of eastern
Europe and spanning four generations. A stunning novel;
highly recommended.”
—Library Journal
“I Am Forbidden moved me deeply. It brings many things wonderfully
to life, including parts of history that I thought I knew but I now
know better. Above all, it makes vivid the great comfort of strict
religion, but also its sometimes painful confinement. I was swept
away when I first read it. Now I am enlarged after reading it
again.”
—John Casey, author of National Book Award winner Spartina and
Compass Rose
“It is the rare novel that manages to be both achingly sympathetic
and formidably honest. I Am Forbidden is both of these, and much
more. Anouk Markovits's exploration of the obligations of faith—and
the equally pressing obligations of the loving heart and
inquisitive mind—is riveting.”
—Tova Mirvis, author of The Ladies Auxiliary and The Outside
World
“In this gem of a book Anouk Markovits takes a reader to an
exotic world, portrayed with such warmth and precision that the
journey feels perfectly real and the characters become your
intimate friends.”
—Lara Vapnyar, author of There Are Jews in My House
“In her intense and appealing novel on the Satmar pious enclave,
migrating after the Holocaust from Transylvania to
Williamsburg, Anouk Markovits scrutinizes with a sharp
eye both sides of the human conflict between free choice and
limitless obedience. It's a fierce and sometimes tragic struggle
for happiness through belonging to a community closed in its
tradition or through independence and individuality—involving mind
and soul, integrity and ideal, hope and despair. The revelatory,
well-structured narrative, focuses on a topic that goes beyond
Jewish, Christian or whatever religious or non-religious dogma
to the very core of many ardent tensions in our troubled
modernity.”
—Norman Manea, author of The Hooligan’s Return
“This novel is truly a seminal work on the topic of Jewish
Fundamentalism. With unparalleled detail and poignant storytelling,
this saga of a Satmar family explores and debunks the myths upon
which the extreme version of Judaism we know today was founded, and
it does so with a resounding clang. I found myself gripping the
edge of my seat quite a few times, holding my breath while I waited
to see how the characters in this novel would find
self-determination. People will read this novel both because it is
a beautiful story told in a magical setting, and because it
completely unravels a world heretofore tightly enclosed. I extend
my deepest gratitude and admiration for Anouk Markovits, who so
skillfully brought my world to life, and abolished the mysteries
that remained of my childhood.”
—Deborah Feldman, author of New York Times bestseller
Unorthodox
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