Susan Sered's ethnography of Kurdish elderly Jewish women at a Jerusalem Senior Citizen's Day Center is a fascinating read. In a breezy 142 pages she relates the stories and rituals of these devout Jews to show how they have developed their own female-oriented "little tradition" within broader patriarchal Judaism. The main strength (and invitation) of the book is summed up in her concluding sentence: "As scholars learn to shift attention from what men and texts say about women to what women say about themselves, new conceptions of human religious experience begin to emerge" (p. 141). Sered has focused on the religious experience of these women to show how women can greatly benefit even in certain patricentric traditions. She argues that these women have "domesticated" religion by focusing on elements that resonate most with them, including the importance of extended family, departed prophets, and devotion to God who oversees all. I believe this "domestication" is not unique to women, it seems to me we all appropriate things from our traditions that resonate most with us as we construct our religious worlds. I strongly recommend this book.