My thoughts on Anzia Yezierska's BREAD GIVERS
*Originally posted on Goodreads . **Some spoilers (sorry) I had to read Anzia Yezierska's Bread Givers for class in late September this years, and I simply loved it. In class, we are talking about immigration in America, this book helping us on the focus of Jewish immigrants. I'd expected to be bored by the read, but Yezierska's writing style was so immersive, I'd end up reading ahead of what had been assigned for class. The story focuses on Sara Smolinsky, living with her father, mother, and sisters, Bessie, Fania, and Mashah. It shows the issue between the ways of the "Old World", meaning the traditional ways of life, and the "New World", veering off said path into a more independent route. The father is strongly set in his traditional ideology, with the importance of religion, the need to marry off daughters, and the general control he holds in the household. The mother accepts this, and though we see moments of ...