The Prophetess

The Prophetess

by: Evonne Marzouk

Bancroft Press, October 2019

320 pages

Review by: Rabbi Amy Grossblatt Pessah

As a senior, Rachel wants nothing more than to enjoy her final year of high school by hanging out with friends, going to football games, and even to successfully complete her schoolwork, as she prepares to apply to college for the coming fall. Rachel is surrounded by a loving family and a wonderful group of friends but when her Zaide (grandfather) dies and when she begins to experience strange visions, her “typical” senior year becomes far from typical. Throughout the passing months, Rachel begins to feel that there is something deeper within herself that she is meant to tap into.

Although her family is secularly Jewish now, Rachel’s mother and mother’s father, her Zaide (grandfather) practiced Orthodox Judaism. Despite Rachel’s secular upbringing, she finds herself attending high holidays services at a local Orthodox synagogue. It is there that she meets a stranger, Yonatan, who reminds her of her Zaide and who becomes an important mentor to her, teaching her to connect to her God-given gifts. As their relationship develops, Rachel, too develops a greater understanding of what it means to be part of the Jewish people and how by growing into her own gifts, she can be of the highest service to others. Amdst these deep questions, Rachel works to balance being a “normal” teenager with her growing, mystical experiences.

In The  Prophetess a young adult fantasy novel, author Evonne Marzouk does a great job, balancing the many aspects of Rachel’s life. We read about the challenges Rachel experiences as a teenager with her parents, sister and friends. Marzouk craftily introduces many critical issues that teenagers deal with today including: insecurity, bullying, eating disorders, and addiction. One specific issue that feels especially timely is the inclusion of Rachel’s friend, Maya, whose mother is a Jewish convert born in the Philippines. Maya is teased because of her dual identity. As the good friend that she is, Rachel helps Maya deal with this insensitive bullying. Marzouk deftly handles all of these topics with thoughtfulness and yet, they are not too heavy, so as to detract from the main message of the book. Throughout the novel, we see Rachel learning to listen more closely to her gifts; thereby, better able to address those critical issues described above, by using her gifts to help those around her.

As a parent reading this young adult novel, a point that gave me pause relates to Rachel’s initial secrecy as she takes more interest in Jewish tradition and in her mystical training with Yonatan. While I acknowledge the reality that many teenagers feel the need for secrecy, especially when they are exploring new or different areas of interest, I wished that Rachel had felt more initially accepted and less judged by her family but that is me speaking as a parent, not me who probably would have been just as secretive as a teenager.

I found the book to be an enjoyable, deep read, providing much food for thought. Rachel’s character is real, honest, and vulnerable—all qualities that are needed to grow one’s own gifts. Kudos to Evonne Marzouk for writing such an engaging, thought-provoking young adult novel.


Amy Grossblatt Pessah is a rabbi, author, spiritual director and mom. Serving various communities and demographics across the country, Amy has been a Jewish educator for over thirty years, with a specialization in Jewish Family Education. She received her Master’s degree in Jewish education from HUC-JIR and her semicha from Aleph: Alliance for Jewish Renewal. She lives in Florida with her husband and together they are the proud parents of three young adults. Follow her on instagram @parenting_on_a_prayer.  To learn more about Amy, visit: https://www.asoulfuljourney.com 

Parenting on a Prayer

Parenting on a Prayer

by: Amy Grosblatt Pessah

Ben Yehuda Press, March 2020

186 pages

Review by: Evonne Marzouk

A lot of parenting books focus on sleep-training and toddler eating, but few focus on the parenting journey from birth through the teen years. Parenting on a Prayer: Ancient Jewish Secrets for Raising Modern Children is one of those rare parenting books that can provide wisdom at all stages of the parenting journey.

Written by Rabbi and Jewish educator Amy Grossblatt Pessah, the book is structured around eighteen traditional Jewish prayers.  For each prayer, the author provides anecdotes and wisdom around a specific theme of parenting.  For example, after a description of the prayer Mi Chamocha (Who is like You), the book teaches Empowerment in parenting. For Shema (Listen), the anecdotes focus on Love.

When I first began reading Parenting on a Prayer, I wasn’t sure I would have derived the same lessons from the prayers that the author did. But the book’s anecdotes and lessons were so meaningful and open-hearted about the parenting journey that I stopped caring about whether each theme fit its prayer exactly as I understood it.  My understanding about Jewish prayers can admittedly be a bit rigid; both those who are familiar and those who are less familiar with the Jewish prayers might find new and enriching meaning in the Jewish liturgy from the interpretations provided here.

Reading this book, I re-remembered the great balance of parenthood: giving children space to grow into their own selves, while also letting them know we are fully available to them.  Early on, the author reflects on the important of names as demonstrated in the Ma Tovu prayer: “Your tents, O Jacob, your dwelling places, O Israel.”  The parenting lesson recognizes that though we give our children names, how and what they are called will grow and evolve with them throughout their lives.

Children’s growth and development is part of a healthy and natural process, even when they sometimes grow in a way we as parents wouldn’t have expected or chosen. This theme continues through many sections of the book. For example, when the author’s daughter at age 12 asked to change her room (in the section on Boundaries), her mother had to be willing to let go of the beautiful fairies decorating the walls. When her son didn’t see Judaism the same way as his mother (in the section on G-d), she told him she loved him and always would – despite their differing views.

That said, I also really appreciated how the author offered chapters that enable parents to teach their children about their own values, for example, having compassion for creation (Words Matter), or seeing G-d’s hand in life (Trust), or inculcating children in family traditions (Family).

What I appreciated most of all about this book was the friendly voice of a mother who’s been there in the struggle and honestly reports out her best efforts – both successes and failures – from the trenches. More even that the specific lessons, the stories from this book reminded me of moments in my own childhood or motherhood journey, and so often I was touched to discover my experiences were not unique. Sometimes as parents we’re afraid to share the messy parts, but hearing some of another’s journey and knowing that I am not alone was a gift.

Parenting on a Prayer can offer previews of coming attractions to new parents, but it also shines as a companion for parents who have been at this for a while.  It offers the comforting wisdom: The struggle is real. Other parents have experienced similar.  You will get through this. And it provides a framework and ideas for how to survive the experience with some grace and dignity – and raise kids who thrive.


Evonne Marzouk grew up in Philadelphia and received a B.A. from the Johns Hopkins University in the Writing Seminars program, with a minor in Religious Studies. She has worked on international policy and communications projects for two decades as an employee of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. From 2004-2014, Evonne founded and served as executive director of Canfei Nesharim (recently merged with GrowTorah), an organization that teaches Jewish wisdom about protecting the environment, and she co-edited Uplifting People and Planet, a collection of Jewish environmental core teachings, published in 2014. Her first novel, The Prophetess, was published by Bancroft Press in 2019. Follow her on instagram at @evonnemarz.

Meteors and Menorahs

Meteors and Menorahs

by: Nessa Claugh

Self Published November 2021

180 pages

Review by: E Broderick

Everyone knows I’m a sucker for sci fi and a recently converted romance devotee, so it felt right to kick off my Hanukkah posts with Nessa Claugh’s alien fake dating Hannukah romance Meteors and Menorahs. Yes your read that correctly. Alien. Fake dating. Hannukah romance.  Forget interfaith, we’re going full on inter species in this holiday romcom. 

This trope-tastic story follows Leah, a thirty something anesthesiologist as she convinces her colleague and secret crush Kenneth to be her fake date for Hanukkah so she can get her family, and her ex-boyfriend, off her back. It also contains about a million and one fun romance tropes. Alien romance? That’s kind of the premise. Fake dating? Check. Evil ex boyfriend? His name is David and he’s the literal worst. Only one bed? Most definitely. There’s even a bonus sexy sunscreen application scene. 

My one criticism comes when the book leans too heavily into one of the many fun tropes it uses: aliens failing to understand human behavior. In his job as a physical therapist working with disabled humans Kenneth swings a bit ableist. It’s a minor point, covered in a few paragraphs, but I wish our alien friend was given the chance to grow and more fully understand this human experience. Similarly there are a couple of lines that disappointed me as a religious person and I few I suspect will disapoint queer readers. They can easily be deleted without affecting plot or character development and the story would be more friendly to diverse readers from all backgrounds. 

This is a high heat book with some fun alien anatomy thrown in too (is that a trope? If it’s not, it should be.) Definitely not safe for work.

Overall, this was a quick read full of good food and fun. Easily devoured in one sitting much the same way Kenneth inhales sufganiyot. 

Note – I received a free e-copy of this book through BookSprout in exchange for an honest review.


E Broderick is a writer and speculative fiction enthusiast. When not writing she enjoys epic games of trivial pursuit and baking. She currently lives in the U.S. but is eagerly awaiting the day a sentient spaceship offers to take her traveling around the galaxy.

The Assignment

The Assignment

by: Liza Wiemer

Delacorte Press, August 2020

336 pages

Review by: Valerie Estelle Frankel

THE ASSIGNMENT by Liza Weimer has echoes of The Wave, the famous real-life story in which a history teacher started a Nazilike cult as a demonstration, but for a new generation. It also resonates with stories like Dear White People, which emphasize how blindness to racist activities easily get out of hand. As such, it’s a valuable teaching tool for students and instructors alike. 

“Are we supposed to pretend we’re Nazis?” the book opens, as appalled student Logan considers their assignment. Indeed, the teens are all supposed to pretend they’re at the Wannsee Conference, debating pros and cons of the Final Solution. Some of the students are instantly disgusted: There is no pro-genocide moral position, and no decent person should argue it. No assignment should allow for the possibility that the Nazis were right or normalize their ideology. Other students in the room are already snickering and sketching Nazi symbols. The teacher insists that the lesson has historical merit and that he in no way encourages students to believe in Nazi ideology. With this, the conflict is established. 

Best friends Logan and Cade complain to the teacher, then the principal. The teacher counters them by agreeing that the assignment is immoral but insisting the school is a safe place to learn to combat racism. As he adds “You find genocide offensive? Good! This assignment should make you uncomfortable. Life is often uncomfortable” (59). However, Cade protests that the assignment fuels intolerance. As the football players joke with Nazi salutes, he can see what the teacher cannot. There are no Jews at the school, but the gay kid in the class is shrinking into himself in torment.  Chapters begin with mostly Logan and Cade’s point of view and expand outward until their teacher is finally sharing his own perspective. Other students are traumatized by the discrimination the assignment provokes and get a chance to tell their stories. 

The principal too dismisses their concerns, considering the assignment reasonable and their protests an overstepping of their position as students. As the authorities dismiss student concerns instead of acknowledging that the assignment is getting out of hand, community anger snowballs and the teachers find they can no longer contain it. Many modern genocides and moments of discrimination are mentioned, emphasizing the universal threat of condoning racism. There’s a lesson here in understanding that minorities often have a different awareness of what is harmful that those in authority don’t see. Listening is the key to ending the harm. 

The conflict is also made personal: Logan recalls a beloved Jewish neighbor, while Cade thinks of his grandfather, who risked his life to save a neighbor in Poland. As he soon discovers, the family story is more complicated and affects him deeply. Further, Logan takes Cade to the Fort Ontario Safe Haven Museum to learn about Italian refugees who came over postwar. With a polished presentation and writeup, the teens politely propose this story as an alternate assignment. Still, few students decline the original debate. Frustrated, the teens take their concern to the anti-discrimination organization Humanity for Peace and Justice, and their representative, when ignored, speaks to the newspapers. The story goes viral, with a spectrum of comments reproduced in the book. As such, it models how to respond to such assignments, on large and small levels. The book ends with an overview of the real-life incident that provoked this book, resources, and discussion questions. In a world where so many questionable assignments are being forced on students, lacking consideration of how teens will feel defending slavery or colonialism, everyone should read this. 


Valerie Estelle Frankel is the author of over 80 books on pop culture, including Hunting for Meaning in The Mandalorian; Inside the Captain Marvel Film; and Star Wars Meets the Eras of Feminism. Her Chelm for the Holidays (2019) was a PJ Library book, and now she’s the editor of Jewish Science Fiction and Fantasy, publishing an academic series for Lexington Press. Book one, Jewish Science Fiction and Fantasy through 1945, has just arrived. Once a lecturer at San Jose State University, she now teaches at Mission College and San Jose City College and speaks often at conferences. Come explore her research at www.vefrankel.com

The Last Words We Said

The Last Words We Said

by: Leah Scheier

Simon and Schuster, August 2021

320 pages

Review by: E Broderick

There’s something inexplicably sweet about growing up female in an Orthodox Jewish community. The women’s singing and baking groups, the close knit families, the ability to unabashedly call your friend “the girls” as if you are the heroine of a Nancy Drew novel. Yet orthodox life can also be challenging, full of rules that restrict your behavior and limit your options. At times it can feel like a society full of clucking tongues “who only want the best for you” are hemming you in with their judgements and their love. It is this delicate push and pull that lies at the center of Leah Scheier’s contemporary YA novel The Last Words We Said.

Set in Atlanta and alternating between present day and flashbacks, the story follows three modern orthodox Jewish girls as they deal with the disappearance of their closest friend, Danny. It is a dark thriller of a ride full of secrets, but it is also a quiet exploration of faith. Each girl handles Danny’s death differently. The viewpoint character, Ellie, insists she still sees him after he is dead. Her friend Deenie throws herself into religion so completely as to be borderline fanatical, taking on “extreme chumras” (stringencies of practice that are not necessarily advised or healthy). The third member of the trio, Rae, heads in the opposite direction. Already questioning her commitment to Judaism before Danny’s death, Rae doubles down into her rebel-against-tradition status after he is gone. She also bakes like a woman possessed.

Many people have a religious phase, “frumming out” as it is colloquially known, during their childhood. Often these are temporary stages while the individual in question works through their own personal dialogue with God and faith. However, in cases like Deenie’s religious practice can become a compulsion used to assuage guilt over real or imagined wrong doing.

Rae’s statement that rebellion is about her, and not about being an awful person to everyone around her, is representation that is sorely lacking in both Jewish fiction and the real world. Leaving the faith is often presented as an all or nothing event in which a person either toes the line or loses their family and become a strung out cautionary tale. Rae presents a third option.

Possibly the most universal experience, even for those not religiously inclined, is Ellie’s. The way Ellie deals with her own transgression of faith right before Danny’s disappearance and her resulting grief will ring true to anyone that has ever kept a secret from someone that is no longer around to hear it.

One of the more controversial practices mentioned in the book revolves around dating and physical intimacy. Simply known as being “shomer,” many Orthodox Jewsish boys and girls do not touch each other.

Ignoring the inherent homophobia here, it is a rule that is again both empowering and humiliating all at once. Especially when you are a teenage girl like Ellie. Because the tricky thing, that Scheier handles so deftly, is that shomer is often treated as an obligation of community morality rather than an option for the benefit of the couple in question. A must rather than a choice.

Outside expectations are layered onto to the burgeoning romance of Danny and Ellie to the point where it becomes hard to decipher what Ellie wants versus what everyone else is telling her to want. She is a young person held up as a paragon of virtue to her peers, put up on a pedestal by a society that uses praise as a cudgel to keep its members in line. Because the moment she became a member of the poster couple for “shomer” what should have been an intimate, personal decision became fodder for community gossip. Which can mess with anyone’s psyche, especially a teen who only a few weeks later then has to cope with the aftermath of her boyfriend’s death.

This is the inherent struggle in Ellie’s life. The reason she cannot let her dead boyfriend go and the reason he, in my opinion, never fully understood her. It is the same reason I feel the men in this book consistently fail to own up to their part of the problem in an equivalent way to the introspection we see from the female characters.

Ellie learns the hard way that no matter how loving and caring your boyfriend is, they will never understand what it means to be a girl in a religious community. That a girls transgression will never be viewed the same way as a boys is. Because while a boy will get off with a few light slaps on the back (some of which are probably congratulatory) breaking the rules will shatter so much more than a girls self image or reputation. Because consequences aren’t the same for female presenting individuals in our communities. They never were and they never will be until we let go of some of our notions about purity and gender bias.

This is a book about secrets kept not out of loyalty but out of fear. Fear that others will judge you if you make a mistake. Fear that those you love might reject you if they know your whole truth. Fear that the only community you know is not ready to embrace you. So for all the heartbreak that ensued, I’m glad that in the end Ellie and her friends learned to truly trust each other.

There is a Jewish concept that everything in this world, every relationship and emotion that we experience, has been put here to help us understand God. The kind of love that these girls have for each other? The kind that never falters even when society tries to use it to tear them down and make them feel small? That’s the kind of love I like to think God has for us all. It is only our fallible human selves that have erred and placed conditions on being a member of our communities, and in doing so we wrong each other.

Which is all a really long-winded way of me encouraging you all to pick up this book and find pieces of yourselves in these wonderful girls. Whether you are religious or not, it will speak to you.

Note: This book was in my to be reviewed pile and I was waiting for my library hold to come in when the author kindly offered an electronic review copy.


E Broderick is a writer and speculative fiction enthusiast. When not writing she enjoys epic games of trivial pursuit and baking. She currently lives in the U.S. but is eagerly awaiting the day a sentient spaceship offers to take her traveling around the galaxy.

The City Beautiful

The City Beautiful

by: Aden Polydoros

Inkyard Press, October 2021

330 pages

Review by: E Broderick

This is the first, and probably last, time I will review a book that has been dedicated to me. But you scream, Isn’t that a gross conflict of interest? Normally I would say yes. I typically rely on guest reviewers for posts about books I have a vested interest in. However, I think you will agree with me that The City Beautiful by Aden Polydoros is the one notable exception to this rule. Because the author did not know he was dedicating this book to me (and possibly you!) when he wrote it.

Crack open the spine on this gorgeously lush dark Jewish historical fantasy set during the Chicago world’s fair and you will find that Polydoros has dedicated the story of a young immigrant possessed by his former crush’s dybbuk to all of the readers that see themselves within its pages. And I saw myself in this book in a way I never thought possible for a mass market YA that received starred reviews from most of the major trade publications. It even had yiddish!

I immediately felt a kinship to the protagonist Alter. The name, which means “old”, is commonly given to those born ill or sick. The idea is to trick the angel of death by calling a newborn old. I received a similarly symbolic name at my birth.

Alter is a deeply religious Jew who finds comfort in this strange land of America by diving deep into the Jewish traditions that remind him of home. However, he carries a heavy secret in his heart. He harbors a secret crush on his roommate Yakov and when Yakov is murdered it is this love that allows Yakov’s dybbuk to posses Alter. It is also this same love that prevents Alter from seeking an exorcism. Instead, he must pursue the only other viable option to rid himself of the dybbuk before it kills him – solve the mystery of Yakov’s murder and rain vengeance down upon his killer.

Aiding him in this task is Frankie, a former Yeshiva student who has turned Robin Hood and now runs a group of thieves who steal from the rich bosses that exploit Chicago’s immigrants. Alter used to work for Frankie and as the plot unfolds one begins to wonder if Frankie’s dogged support of Alter isn’t a little more than friendly. It is rare to find a Jew so unabashedly afraid to be ambitious and shine a light on the ugliness that lurks in the corners of polite society than Frankie. Equally chaotic, literally – she’s an anarchist, is Raizel. A former shiduch date of Alter’s turned friend, Raizel is a girl after my own heart. She is equally willing to rail against the horrible view from the women’s gallery in shul and the lack of respect she gets as a female reporter. She also clearly kicks Alter’s tuchus in ESL class. Because she’s not afraid to be exceptional in a world where men are supposed to come first and women are told to sit up in the gallery, unseen and unheard.

Following this trio through the deeply disturbing underbelly of the Chicago World’s Fair, the story alternates between sharp social commentary, a treatise on religion and a charming love story. It was utterly captivating and fulfilling. Because, without giving too much away, Polydoros manages to give his religious Jews a happy ending. This book does not shy away from trauma, violence, hate or gore but – wonder of wonder, miracle of miracles  – there is hope at the end for everyone who sees themselves in its pages.


E Broderick is a writer and speculative fiction enthusiast. When not writing she enjoys epic games of trivial pursuit and baking. She currently lives in the U.S. but is eagerly awaiting the day a sentient spaceship offers to take her traveling around the galaxy.

Competitive Grieving

Competitve Grieving

by Nora Zelevansky

Blackstone Publishing, May 2021

390 pages

Review by Emily Barth Isler

This book has everything I love: romance, humor, depth, thoughtful reflections on life and friendship, and likable-if-flawed (aren’t we all?!) characters. Sigh. I loved it so much I just wanted to read it all over again the moment I finished. (So I did!)

The arc of the story, and of its main character, Wren, is so satisfying, and I loved that it takes the reader through the whole process of grief, and all the many ways grief can manifest. It can make us all less flattering versions of ourselves sometimes, and then, if we’re lucky, take us to a new place of understanding and grace and generosity, as it does in this book.

I love to read romances, and I love women’s fiction, and I feel like this book has the best elements of each. It isn’t predictable, yet it does allow the reader to see some insights before they materialize to Wren, who is clouded by her grief. It’s a coming of age story in the best way. I’ve always thought it silly that so many coming of age stories take place around teenagers, when so many people, myself included, truly came of age in our early adulthood. Wren is lost at the beginning of the book, in ways she doesn’t even realize. By the end, while everything isn’t tidy and easy, she has certainly grown and blossomed in such satisfying ways I really related to.

I love the romantic elements of the book– it’s swoony without being unrealistic. I love how real all the characters felt to me. They were unique and quirky and hilarious, but felt like they could be MY old friends, not just Wren’s! I recognized each of them and yet they surprised me just like real people do. And even when they made dubious choices, I could empathize.

As a Jewish reader, the way that Competitive Grieving portrays the Jewish rituals around death (the funeral, shiva, etc) were well-portrayed and familiar. It is always nice to see representations of Jewish life like this in fiction that isn’t necessarily *about* Judaism or Being Jewish (in capital letters), but rather showing the normalcy of Jewish life in incidental ways. I love when a book features characters who are “incidentally” Jewish, like this one, as it gives a peek into the many ways of being Jewish that is accessible to readers of all faiths and normalizes our traditions and customs by experience. 

Nora Zelevansky’s writing is just flat-out gorgeous. I’m a huge fan of her other novels, especially “Will You Won’t You Want Me” which is one of my all-time favorite books. I re-read it whenever I need a pick-me-up, and I know “Competitive Grieving” will be a similar guidepost for me in years to come. Her prose is evocative and rich, yet accessible, a combination so rare and so lovely. I can’t wait for her next book!!!


Emily Barth Isler lives in Los Angeles, California, with her husband and their two kids. A former child actress, she performed all over the world in theatre, film, and TV. Her debut novel for Middle Grade readers and their families, AfterMath, came out in September 2021, and Amy Schumer calls it “A gift to the culture.” It’s available everywhere books are sold (including as an audiobook read by the author!) and at emilybarthisler.com/aftermath. In addition to books, Emily writes about sustainable, eco-friendly beauty and skincare, and has also written web sitcoms, parenting columns, and personal essays. She has a B.A. in Film Studies from Wesleyan University, and really, really loves television. Find her at www.emilybarthisler.com

All I Want for Hanukah

Jewish Holiday Literature

by E. Broderick

It’s that time of year again. Festive decorations in red and gold festoon store windows and “holiday romance” tables full of Christmas novels pop up like the animals in a game of whac-a-mole. Nestled in among this plethora of Yuletide offerings is usually a blue and silver nod towards diversity, including a Jew-ified replica of whatever the Christian accessory du jour is. This year that appears to be gnomes. 

Now don’t get me wrong. When Hanukah decor is well done, I am typically one of its biggest purchasers. I love the infectious joy that permeates the air this time of year, and I appreciate the attempts at inclusion by retailers. But what this girl would really like for Hanukah is an acknowledgement that a plethora of other Jewish holidays exist. Hanukah is a relative newcomer to the Jewish calendar and its rise to mass market super stardom has more to do with it being Christmas adjacent than anything Jewish people have requested. Given that the holiday commemorates the refusal of Jews to assimilate into the prevailing (Greek) culture of the day, the irony in this situation is palpable. 

Want to make my holiday wish come true? When crafting your holiday gifting list, please consider including one of these books that features a less renowned, but equally meaningful, Jewish holiday. 

Rosh Hashana

The Jewish New Year is best known for the custom of dipping apples into a sweet substance – either honey or sugar – as a good omen for a sweet new year. It also involves the blowing of the shofar, a ceremonial horn, and meals spent wishing friends and family a happy, healthy new year.

One of the most poignant Rosh Hashana scenes I have ever read was in the Middle Grade novel How to Find What You’re not Looking For by Veera Hiranandani. The Many Mysteries of the Finkel Family by Sarah Kapit is another great Middle Grade pick that includes this holiday. If Romance is more your thing, Higher by Roz Alexander is a butch for butch Rosh Hashana romance and the steamy sci fi Embracing Irina by Michelle Mars is another great choice. Plus, in an embarrassment of riches, the upcoming romcom As Seen on TV by Meredith Schorr also includes Rosh Hashana rep.

Yom Kippur

Yom Kippur is the Jewish day of atonement, when we ask forgiveness from God, but also from each other. Many Jews will fast and spend the day in Synagogue. As it comes so close to Rosh Hashana many refer to this period as “The Jewish High Holidays.” Three Middle Grade novels that feature both holidays are Chris Baron’s novel in verse, The Magical Imperfect, as well as the soon to be released Repairing the World by Linda Epstein which deals with grief and loss and Where You’ve Got to Be by Caroline Gertler. On a lighter note, The Renegade Reporters by Elisa Brent Weissman is a Middle Grade mystery that mentions Yom Kippur.

In the Young Adult space, Laura Silverman’s contemporary novel You Asked for Perfect as well as Leah Scheier’s heartbreaking The Last Words We Said both include Yom Kippur scenes.

Sukkot

Rounding out the month of Jewish Holidays that messes up everyone’s work calendar is Sukkot, the festival in which Jewish people build temporary outdoor huts in which we eat, socialize and shake our lulav and etrog. As a bonus we also have Simchat Torah, the annual celebration of the reading of the Torah, at the end of Sukkot.

The Middle Grade graphic novel Mooncakes by Wendy Xu and Suzzane Walker includes mention of Sukkot. And while the Young Adult Kissing Ezra Holts (and Other Things I Did for Science) by Brianna Shrum features several holidays, I hope you will agree the scene in the Sukkah is exceptionally delightful. 

Hanukah

You thought I was going to leave this out right? Wrong! The festival of lights, on which Jews light the hanukiah (menorah) and eat latkes and donuts has inspired some terrific books and I am not willing to skip them.

Takedown by Laura Shovan is a Middle Grade novel that weaves together girls in sports and character diversity, including one character that celebrates Hanukah. Another Laura Shovan book, this one co-authored with Saadia Faruqi, is A Place at The Table which includes many diverse holidays, Hanukkah amongst them. The YA romcom Recommended for You by Laura Silverman also includes Hanukah as does What I like About You by Marissa Kanter.

This is Just a Test a Middle Grade novel by Wendy Wan-Long Shang and Madelyn Rosenberg has a Latke making competition  you will not want to miss!

The Friendship and Festivals series by Stacey Agdern is a set of three linked adult romance novels, two of which surround Hanukah. They can be read alone, in any order, or binge read in one sitting depending on your reading preference. I’ll be Home for Hanukkah by K.K. Hendin is a Hanukkah romcom novella for those who need something shorter to read.

And yes there are a million ways to spell Hanukah. Just go with it.

Purim

Purim is a fan favorite among Jewish children who dress in costume and distribute packages of treats known as Mishloach Manot to friends, family and neighbours. It is also the day we read Megillat Esther and an auspicious time to give charity.

The recent Middle Grade hareidi (a descriptor for strict orthodox observance) release On the Move, the fifth in the Achdus Club series from author Faygie Holt, has a Purim scene that explores the true meaning of friendship. The upcoming The Book of Elsie by Joanne Levy is another Purim Middle Grade book.

The Wolf and the Woodsman by Ava Reid includes a second world fantasy version of Judaism as well as a Purim celebration. Another fantasy containing Purim references, this time a historical fantasy, is Creatures of Charm and Hunger by Molly Tanzer. 

The Purim Fling is the first in the Yom Tov series of holiday romance novellettes by Sara Marks. A worthy selection for adults looking for some Purim joy.

Passover

Known to most people as “the one from the Ten Commandments movie” Passover celebrates the Jewish exodus from Egypt. Many Jews refrain from eating leavened bread in any form and host a traditional Seder in which we retell the story of Passover. It is also very well represented amongst the genres.

The Trouble With Good Ideas by Amanda Panitch is a humorous Middle Grade featuring Passover and a golem. The Girl with the Red Balloon by Katherine Locke is a historical thriller that references Passover.

Passover romance is exemplified in Matzah Ball Surprise by Laura Brown and Their Troublesome Crush by  Xan West, of blessed memory. Unleavened Dead by Ilene Schneider is a Passover mystery. The seder serves as the perfect setting for family drama in Brenda Janowitz’s The Dinner Party. Passover, as well as deep buried secrets, also plays a critical role in The Wartime Sisters by Lynda Cohen Loigman. 

Shavuot

On Shavuot we celebrate the receipt of the Torah by the Jewish people at Mount Sinai. It is a time for Jewish learning as well as the consumption of dairy products. My favorite is cheesecake.

Anya and The Dragon by Sofiya Pasternack is a Middle Grade novel that not only features the shavuot treat blinis but also has a very clever dragon. I Kissed a Girl by Jennet Alexander is an LGBTQ+ new adult romance set in the world of horror movies. The featured couple celebrate Shavuot together.

Tisha B’av

While many would question the inclusion of Tisha B’av in a list of holidays, it is an important Jewish day. On this day our temple was destroyed, twice. It is a day for mourning and fasting. It is also a day to understand Jewish pain and what it means to be a persecuted people living in a diaspora. In that vein, I am only going to recommend one book in this category, because it truly personifies the Jewish experience during the destruction of the Temple. Rebel Daughter by Lori Banov Kaufmann is a meticulously researched historical fiction Young Adult novel. It does not describe the holiday of Tisha B’av as we currently observe it but rather the events leading up to and surrounding that fateful day. 

Bonus Points

There were several books that came up that were too broad in scope to be placed into a single holiday category. Many holidays are mentioned in Light of the Midnight Stars a Jewish Young adult fairy tale retelling by Rena Rossner. Abby Tried and True by Donna Gephart is a poignant Middle Grade novel that features most holidays. Shira Glassman has an entire series of romance novels that include many Jewish holidays. The All of a Kind Family Chapter Book series by Sydney Taylor were the first jewish books many people let into their homes and their hearts. The Sydney Taylor Book Awards are named after the author.

If you’ve made it this far I’d like to thank you for taking the time to get to know our holidays a little bit better. I’ve left off a few of the smaller holidays for lack of space and books, but rest assured they exist. I am also certain I’ll have left off a book or two that I simply haven’t read yet. Please support those Jewish books anyway!

I hope your loved one adores their bookish gift. I’ll leave you with one last holiday pro-tip: if you want to win at gift giving then go ahead and buy two copies so that you can read along with them. There is no present that can compare.

A Far Wilder Magic

A Far Wilder Magic

by: Allison Saft

Wednesday Books, March 8, 2022

384 pages

Review by: E Broderick

At first blush “A Far Wilder Magic“, the sophomore effort of author Allison Saft, may not seem an obvious choice for this blog. After all, it is a second world, roaring 20’s inspired, fantasy about a magical fox hunt. Nowhere in its pages does the word “Jewish” appear. However, only a fool would doubt that this is a very, very Jewish book.

The story is told in dual POV. The first, Maggie Welty, is the neglected daughter of an alchemist ostracized by her community due to her father observing the religion of the Yu’adir. The second, Weston Winters, is a bumbling but endearing student hoping to apprentice himself to Maggie’s absentee mother. Ostensibly it is a slow burn love story about two unlikely candidates teaming up to beat all the odds. Yet simmering beneath the small town turned speak easy vibe is something else entirely.

As someone who completed part of her education in an institution fondly known as “The WASP Capital,” it didn’t take more than a couple of chapters for me to grasp that this is the story of a Jewish girl and a Catholic boy confronting their fears, and societies bullies, to take down the Protestant establishment. Saft doesn’t pull her punches. The prejudice that Maggie and Weston face is very ugly, very real and very true to life. Even if the word “antisemitism” or “xenophobia” is never used. It is a universal language instantly recognized by anyone that has experienced it.

We had a tradition in school, a winter formal, in which everyone got dressed up in wedding attire and attended a huge party in a fancy hotel. It was a quasi Prom or debutante ball, only more geek-ish. For many, it was the highlight of the year. For me, it was an unattainable impossibility. Because, it was always held on a Friday night when I could not drive to the venue. Instead, I got all gussied up to attend the pre-party in our dorm and then waved at my classmates as they sped off without me.

Don’t get me wrong, they were good people. Kind people. They often expressed a desire that I could come. Yet they never seemed to realize that unlike the school sponsored senior dinner (also annually held on a Friday night and required driving across a highway to attend so I couldn’t even contemplate walking), this was a student run and organized event. They never talked about rotating the dates. It HAD to be a Friday night, because otherwise how would everyone sleep off the alcohol in time for class on Monday? Honestly, the possibility of change never even occurred to me. Much like Maggie Welty, I made myself small, attempted to blend in, and expected no better from the world around me.

Much like my life, this book is filled with people whose actions are not overtly villainous yet their inaction makes then just as reprehensible for aiding, abetting systemic prejudice and inequality. Saft gives them flesh and bones, taking pains to characterize them as fully as the more obvious heros and villains. Because their complicity is necessary for villains to thrive.

Although the book is slow at first, this is more than made up for by the exceptionally well thought out and fulfilling ending. As the story of Maggie and Weston came to a close I did not think about the feeling of sadness I felt as all my classmates peeled away in their Ubers towards the Ball that I could not attend. Instead, I was reminding of meeting up with the other Jewish students who had stayed behind, as well as the students from other minority faiths who for various reasons chose not to attend. We had chosen something different, but no less special.

My Shabbat candles may not have been as bright as the disco in that hotel. The Kiddush wine not as luxuriant as the open bar. But the faces around my table were open and friendly and the current of understanding that ran through us all was far more electric than anything happening on the dance floor. You might even say a far wilder magic ran through all of our veins that night.

Note: I initially attempted to obtain an arc via NetGalley and was turned down by the publisher. No harm no foul. It happens. However the author later posted on her Twitter that arcs were available for EVERYONE for a limited time and I swooped in and grabbed one. Thank you Allison for the hot tip, and please rest assured that I am not a stalker of your Twitter. I just like books. Especially this one.


E Broderick is a writer and speculative fiction enthusiast. When not writing she enjoys epic games of trivial pursuit and baking. She currently lives in the U.S. but is eagerly awaiting the day a sentient spaceship offers to take her traveling around the galaxy.

How to Find What You’re Not Looking For

How to Find What You’re Not Looking For

by: Veera Hiranandani

Kokila, September 2021

384 pages

Review by: E Broderick

Second person narratives are experiencing a renaissance. Everywhere I turn it seems someone new is attempting to craft a story utilizing this previously rare method of story telling. In inexperienced hands it is a disaster. Bumbling novices try to impress readers and appear “literary” by using a technique they think is sophisticated but in actuality leaves their writing pretentious, stilted and difficult to parse. Lucky for us, Veera Hiranandani is no novice. In her latest middle grade historical fiction novel, How to Find What You’re Not Looking For, she uses the second person to literally push the thoughts and emotions of her main character into the readers consciousness. There is no separation between us and the text. We are the main character and we feel her struggle as a visceral sucker punch because of it. 

The story follows Jewish twelve-year-old Ariel as her life is turned upside down in the summer following the Loving vs. Virginia ruling that declared the banning of interracial marriage was unconstitutional. Ariel has never given much thought to issues of the wider world but when her universe is turned upside down by her sister eloping with a Hindu Indian man that their parents do not approve of, she is forced to do so. We, in turn, are forced to confront these issues as well. To further complicate matters, Ariel is struggling in school due to what we as the reader can easily identify as an undiagnosed learning disability, being bullied by an anti Semitic classmate and her parents contemplating selling the family bakery due to financial difficulty. 

I’ve read and enjoyed Hiranandani’s work before and it is safe to say she does not shy away from tackling difficult issues like race, antisemitism, financial struggles and the internal prejudices that Jewish people have towards the wider world. She has proven she can tell a good story and make us think all at the same time. Yet what made this particular book a stand out for me was in fact the side characters. From the school bully Chris to Ariel’s best friend Jane and back to her babysitter Gabby, they were each so lovingly developed I felt they could carry their own narratives. They breathed life into the world. Made it full and rounded. Even the depictions of Ariel’s parents, who make decisions that Ariel, and by proxy we the readers, disapprove of, are drawn with suck a skillful hand that we never hate them. We simply wish they knew better. 

It would be lovely if I could say I identified with this book because I had a teacher as wonderful as Ariel’s or a friend as determined as Jane. But let’s be real. What I most identified with was seeing the prejudices in those around me and wishing I could change them. As Ariel learns, Holocaust trauma has led to a deeply rooted isolationism in many Jewish communities. We fear that which we view as “other” and the onus of continuing the Jewish people, of making up for all the lives that were lost, presses in on us like the walls of an ever shrinking room and stifles change. This may not be everyone’s experience, Judaism contains multitudes after all, but it really hit home for me. 

I also identified with the family’s Rabbi, whom we never meet, when his advice is relayed through Ariel’s father. In a twist I was not expecting, but that left me pleasantly surprised, he tells Ariel’s parents to do what is in their hearts. This, to me, has always been the definition of Judaism.

As the reader is forced into Ariel’s head, to literally become her by reading this second person story as well as the heart-aching poetry within it, we experience a similar phenomenon. Ariel must look into her own heart and find a way forward for her family. I invite you, the reader, to cast aside your preconceived notions, pick up this book, and do the same. 


E Broderick is a writer and speculative fiction enthusiast. When not writing she enjoys epic games of trivial pursuit and baking. She currently lives in the U. S. but is eagerly awaiting the day a sentient spaceship offers to take her traveling around the galaxy.