A Review of Cakes and Miracles: A Purim Tale by Barbara Diamond Goldin

Cakes and Miracles: A Purim Tale by Barbara Diamond Goldin, New York: Viking, 1991; new shortened edition, Illustrated by Jaime Zollars, Tarrytown NY: Marshall Cavendish Children, 2010.

This fiction picture book set in a small village focuses on a poor widow named Basha and her blind son, Hershel.  Despite his visual impairment, Hershel goes to school and engages in activities that have delighted children for ages, such as “shaking pears from the neighbor’s tree, or catching frogs.” He also plays in the mud near the river and makes sculptures.

Basha tries to support her family by sewing, cooking, and baking cakes and hamantaschen, a Purim pastry.  Herschel helps her by doing his chores, but he wants to accomplish more.  One night, an angel comes to him in a dream, urging the boy to make what he imagines.  (more…)

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Young Arab boy

A Review of Randall’s Wall by Carol Fenner

181482729_2519fcac29_poor-boyA Review of Randall’s Wall by Carol Fenner, 1991; rpt. New York: Bantam Doubleday Dell Books for Young Readers, 1996, 85 pages

This realistic novel for middle-grade children concerns an artistic boy from a poor family.  Randall’s father has abused and abandoned his wife and children, leaving them with little money or food in a home without running water.  Most of Randall’s fifth-grade classmates shun him because he is dirty and withdrawn.  And his teachers don’t know how to handle a boy who daydreams and hates reading aloud.  Randall has built up a psychological wall to keep other people from hurting him. (more…)

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