This recommendation comes from Geoff. Lamb. You can follow him on twitter @Onceatenor.
"London, 2008. Chani Kaufman is a nineteen-year-old woman, betrothed to 
Baruch Levy, a young man whom she has seen only four times before their 
wedding day. The novel begins with Chani standing “like a pillar of 
salt,” wearing a wedding dress that has been passed between members of 
her family and has the yellowed underarms and rows of alteration 
stitches to prove it. All of the cups of cold coffee and small talk with
 men referred to Chani’s parents have led up to this moment. But the 
happiness Chani and Baruch feel is more than counterbalanced by their 
anxiety: about the realities of married life; about whether they will be
 able to have fewer children than Chani’s mother, who has eight 
daughters; and, most frighteningly, about the unknown, unspeakable 
secrets of the wedding night. As the book moves back to tell the story 
of Chani and Baruch’s unusual courtship, it throws into focus a very 
different couple: Rabbi Chaim Zilberman and his wife, Rebbetzin Rivka 
Zilberman. As Chani and Baruch prepare for a shared lifetime, Chaim and 
Rivka struggle to keep their marriage alive—and all four, together with 
the rest of the community, face difficult decisions about the place of 
faith and family life in the contemporary world." 
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