Her story (whose
theme, by the way, is «the lot of
single women
in rural Palestine») may seem to have a happy ending, but don't be fooled, girls; The
Book of Ruth is actually «a pernicious, exploitative tract,» reinforcing the idea that «a woman's happiness and fulfillment require men, that is, a husband and sons.»
In a 1969 New York Times
book review of The Estate the reviewer writes, «If Singer's work can be said to have a
single unifying
theme, it may be something like this: Don't understand the world, or yourself, or anyone else, too quickly.
Functional: 1) Read mode and control mode (
single tap to switch) 2) Fixate pages by width, saved on scroll 3) Search
in books 4) Table of content 5) Night Mode 6) Search ALL books (PDF, DjVu) on device 7) Next Page or scroll pages by tap screen 8) Full screen mode 9) Support e-reader keys like Nook, Kindle, Sony 10) File navigation 11) Recent Books 12) Light and black theme 13) Screen orientation: Portrait, Landscape, Automatic 14) Text Bookmarks for page 15) Links History, back to
books 4) Table of content 5) Night Mode 6) Search ALL
books (PDF, DjVu) on device 7) Next Page or scroll pages by tap screen 8) Full screen mode 9) Support e-reader keys like Nook, Kindle, Sony 10) File navigation 11) Recent Books 12) Light and black theme 13) Screen orientation: Portrait, Landscape, Automatic 14) Text Bookmarks for page 15) Links History, back to
books (PDF, DjVu) on device 7) Next Page or scroll pages by tap screen 8) Full screen mode 9) Support e-reader keys like Nook, Kindle, Sony 10) File navigation 11) Recent
Books 12) Light and black theme 13) Screen orientation: Portrait, Landscape, Automatic 14) Text Bookmarks for page 15) Links History, back to
Books 12) Light and black
theme 13) Screen orientation: Portrait, Landscape, Automatic 14) Text Bookmarks for page 15) Links History, back to page