• "The Passover Haggadah: A Biography" (2020), Princeton University Press •
Inventing Jewish Rituals (2007), winner of the National Jewish Book Award for Contemporary Jewish Life & Practice, is an ethnographic work with a sustained focus on the themes of innovative ritual practice among American Jews (e.g., naming ceremonies for baby girls,
Rosh Chodesh groups, women's seders, healing services). The book was an inspiration for the Reinventing Ritual exhibit at The
Jewish Museum in New York City. •
Sarah Laughed: Modern Lessons from the Wisdom and Stories of Biblical Women (2004 [1st ed.], 2011 [2nd ed.]) offers gendered readings of biblical texts and new accounts of biblical women. •
Words on Fire: One Woman’s Journey into the Sacred (1990), one of the first ethnographic study of feminism in
Orthodox Judaism, is an account of Ochs's stay in Jerusalem learning Torah and
Talmud from women. She details the continued difficulties women face when trying to continue Jewish learning at advanced levels in the Orthodox world. She was commissioned by Princeton University Press's “Lives of Great Religious Books” series to contribute a book on The Passover Haggadah, which she has worked on as a fellow with the Virginia Seminar in Lived Theology. Two other books by Ochs are practically oriented:
Safe and Sound: Protecting Your Child in an Unpredictable World (1995), deals with the phenomenon of parental over-protection, and
The Jewish Dream Book (2003), written with her daughter Elizabeth, applies lessons from Jewish mysticism to dream interpretation. In “Jewish Sensibilities” (2003), drawing upon the thought of Max Kadushin and Yitz Greenberg, Ochs introduces a framework of Jewish sensibilities—‘Making Distinctions’ (
Havdalah), for instance—that characterizes particularly Jewish ways of thinking about what it means to be human. She argues that Jews tend to draw upon these sensibilities in their daily lives, even if they do not practice any of the ritual aspects of Judaism. The notion has been used to understand contemporary Judaism and the future of the community, as well as having been incorporated in various educational programs, both youth and adult. ==Women of the Wall==