I loved listening to this one. It had a wonderful tone (great narration too). Judah Cohen obviously thinks highly of himself, yet somehow he also comes across as earnest and caring. His discretion may be debatable, as he wrote down some highly inflammatory secrets, so I hope he actually managed to hand the letter personally to Bluma Zilberman rather than mailing it.
I also like how the author avoids having Judah give the implication of blackmailing Bluma into marriage by preemptively exposing his own secret to her, although I wonder what the secret behind the secret of his inability to sire children is -- I had fleeting thoughts that maybe he's a woman pretending to be a man, in order to study, a la Yentl; or, maybe he's just physically incapable, otherwise. I haven't had a chance to go back and listen to this yet, so maybe I just missed a quick reveal.
Anyway, I'm glad to hear that there's a sequel to this mini-story, and I look forward to listening to it.