The Phoenix Bride

The cover of The Phoenix Bride. A glue town house surrounded by an intricate floral design which contains pink silhouettes of a man and woman.

The Phoenix Bride

by: Natasha Siegel

March 12, 2024 Dell Books

336 pages

review by: E. Broderick

One of the reasons I am primarily an SFF writer is because I like to envision ways for the impossible to be possible. I find this easier to do in far future settings or in a world with magic. In her sophomore novel, The Phoenix Bride, Natasha Siegel has managed to perform this feat in a historical romance. It’s kind of mind blowing.

The first thing to note is that Siegel’s prose is absolutely stunning. While I felt The Phoenix Bride was solidly a historical romance, I could see an industrious bookseller categorizing it as “literary historical fiction,” due to Siegel’s writing style. They wouldn’t necessarily be wrong. I find that most of the justifications used in making these distinctions are nebulous in the extreme. From the opening chapter where Siegel’s description of joy sets the readers heart aflutter to her later exploration of grief, the text is designed to make the reader feel the viewpoint characters inner journey. I can’t make promises for anyone else, but it certainly worked for me.

That’s not what I mean by making the impossible possible though. I firmly believe genre writers have just as many incredible talents as literary ones. No, the impossible thing in this book is the central relationship. Cecilia is a young protestant widow who manages to fall for David, the Jewish doctor helping her through grief and depression after her husbands unexpected death. It was not exactly common for a Christian woman in 1600’s London to see a Jew as a full human, let alone a romantic partner, nor for society to let such a relationship find a happy ending. Siegel finds a way to make it believable. It is not your typical romance novel ending, that would be historically inaccurate, but it works.

The major stumbling block for me was that I occasionally found myself enraged with Cecilia. It’s lovely that she sees David as an equal, and they do not explore the relationship until she is no longer his patient so there’s no ethical breech, but the risks she has him taking felt extremely selfish to me. If they are caught the person who will suffer most is David. Furthermore, it will not just be his life in shambles. The Jewish community was on very shaky grounds, and David is only living in London because his family has been expelled from Spain and Portugal. The scandal of a high society christian woman being caught with her Jewish doctor could easily have resulted in catastrophe and mass murder of the Jews of London. Perhaps all love is selfish, but I could not forgive Cecilia for pushing David into taking public risks and ignoring the potential repercussions.

David, on the other hand, is delightful. His major issue is falling in love with unattainable people – don’t we all? – despite much easier prospects being readily available. He is either bisexual or pansexual, and this is given historically accurate treatment, plus his practice of medicine is progressive for the time. Through his eyes we see what it is like to be a child of a forced diaspora, what it means to trade in your familiar life for the privilege of openly practicing your faith, and the pain of not being socially permitted to love the way your heart desires. He also has my favorite line – specifically when he ponders christian marriages. Trust me, you’ll laugh out loud when you read it. His journey is thoughtful and deep, laced with a touch of humor, much like the man himself.

The Phoenix Bride spans several historical events, the biggest being the Great Fire of London which has specific impact on Cecilia and David’s relationship. They are written with excellent detail, including some interesting forays into the medicine of the time. This makes it all the more intriguing that The Phoenix Bride manages to have a happy ending for the unlikely couple. As mentioned, it’s unconventional, but if we look around at our modern-day world it seems obvious that conventional solutions have failed us anyway. Perhaps if we all got a little more creative we could make the impossible possible too.


Find It: Goodreads | Bookshop | Amazon

Reader’s Choice – Middle Grade

Title: Reader's Choice Middle Grade. The following book covers are arranged around the title: Meet Rebecca, Rebecca Reznik Reboots The Universe, Finn and Ezra's Bar Mitzvah Time Loop, One More River, Ravenfall, Anya and The Dragon, Black Bird, Blue Road, Benji Zeb is a ravenous Werewolf, All Of A Kind Family, The Color of Sound.

It’s finally time to reveal the Middle Grade Selections from the Reader’s Poll. We have reviews up for six out of the ten, and one is read but we are waiting on the last book in the series so we can review them as a whole. There’s a really nice selection here including both old and new publications.

All Of A Kind Family by Sydney Taylor: Goodreads | Bookshop | Amazon

Anya and the Dragon by Sofiya Pasternack: Goodreads | Bookshop | Amazon | BookishlyJewish Review

Benji Zeb Is A Ravenous Werewolf by Deke Moulton: Goodreads | Bookshop | Amazon | BookishlyJewish Review

Black Bird, Blue Road by Sofiya Pasternack: Goodreads | Bookshop | Amazon | BookishlyJewish Review

The Color Of Sound by Emily Barth Isler: Goodreads | Bookshop | Amazon | BookishlyJewish Review

Finn and Ezra’s Bar Mitzvah Time Loop by Joshua S. Levy: Goodreads | Bookshop | Amazon | BookishlyJewish Review

Letters From Rifka by Karen Hesse: Goodreads | Bookshop | Amazon

Ravenfall by Kalyn Josephson: Goodreads | Bookshop | Amazon

Rebecca Reznik Reboots The Universe by Samara Shanker: Goodreads | Bookshop | Amazon | BookishlyJewish Review

Meet Rebecca (American Girl) by Jacqueline Greene and illustrated by Robert Hunt: Goodreads | Amazon

The Color of Sound

The cover of The Color of Sound. A dark haired girl in profile looking out over waves of color. There are music related objects in the waves.

The Color of Sound

by: Emily Barth Isler

March 5, 2024, Carol Rhoda Books

336 pages

Review by: E. Broderick

I’ve been a mother and I’ve been a daughter. I still am both of those things, yet there is something extremely difficult about defining those relationships. To be a parent is to love somebody else with your whole heart, yet never fully understand them. To be a child is to go through a series of changes including realizing your parents are fallible individuals who were once children too. These states of being are inextricably intertwined but parent and child must also define themselves as individuals. This struggle is at the heart of Emily Barth Isler’s middle grade novel The Color of Sound.

Main character Rosie has always been a violin prodigy, but after a falling out with her best friend she’s starting to question who she is without her music and the demanding schedule it necessitates. She’s on strike and refusing to play – much to the dismay of her high achieving parents. To top off this upheaval, she and her mother are living in Connecticut for the summer to spend more time with her grandmother who is dying from Alzheimer’s. Said grandmother remembers almost nothing except for the fact that Rosie plays violin. Not exactly helping the identity crisis. 

Of note, Rosie experiences the world differently than others around her. Her senses often bleed together, most commonly described in the book by the way sound has color for her, which is known as synesthesia. Her inability to talk to her mother about this is reflective of the larger communication block between them. In a twist, Rosie finds a way to communicate with a childhood version of her mother, which she finds much easier than present day conversations. She learns how people change over time, how our characters are shaped by life events, and that her past is more nuanced than she expected.

Middle graders who do not enjoy “the kissing books” will be fine with this one. Rosie does have a crush on an older boy but this is not the focus of the plot and it is handled very gently. If anything, there’s more talk about Rosie’s former best friend and her desire to tell Rosie about all the girls she likes, showing that we all mature at different paces and one friend might be more interested in romance than another. However, there is an off page traumatic loss of a pet and I know some of my readers specifically ask for that content note. You can easily skip those pages if you need to.

Rosie is not on strike because she hates the violin. On the contrary, its loss feels like a gaping hole to the reader. She’s simply trying to figure out her life and how much of herself she wants to have defined by this one thing vs. how much her parents are demanding of her. Similarly, Rosie’s mother was less religiously inclined than her own parents and didn’t want a bat mitzvah. Ironically, as part of her later practice Rosie’s mother decides not to eat bacon even though Rosie’s grandfather cooks and eats it regularly. Everyone’s connection to Judaism is different and Rosie then makes her own personal choices about her religious practice.

The Color of Sound is a book about how we each define ourselves, how those choices are influenced by our relationships, but also how there is always room for change. Rosie makes peace with her music, but also with her families’ past. She celebrates what makes her special, including her synesthesia, and she finds the words to communicate this to those that mean the most to her. Middle grade readers going through the complicated process of growing up will hopefully find some inspiration in her story. 

Note: BookishlyJewish received a finished copy of this book from the publisher after we emailed.


Find It: Goodreads | Bookshop |Amazon

Reader’s Choice Young Adult

Title: Reader's Choice Young Adult Fiction!
The following book covers are laid out in a square: This Dark Descent, Cool For The Summer, When The Angels Left The Old Country, The Blood Years, A Warning of Swans, Going Bicoastal, Tracker 220, One More River, the City Beautiful, Today, Tonight, Tomorrow

Here are the YA audience picks! We have reviews up for seven out of ten and one has been glaring at us from our TBR for an amount of time we find embarrassing and therefore we are rapidly trying to remedy this situation. FYI one books was moved to the MG list which will be released next week since the publisher officially categorizes it as MG.

The Blood Years by Elana K. Arnold: Goodreads | Bookshop | Amazon

Cool For The Summer by Dahlia Adler: Goodreads | Bookshop | Amazon | BookishlyJewish review

The City Beautiful by Aden Polydoros: Goodreads | Bookshop | Amazon | BookishlyJewish Review

This Dark Descent by Kalyn Josephson: Goodreads | Bookshop | Amazon | BookishlyJewish Review

Going Bicoastal by Dahlia Adler: Goodreads | Bookshop | Amazon | BookishlyJewish Review

One More River by Lynne Reid Banks: Goodreads | Amazon

Today, Tonight, Tomorrow by Rachel Lynn Solomon: Goodreads | Bookshop | Amazon | BookishlyJewish Review

Tracker220 by Jamie Krakover: Goodreads | Bookshop | Amazon | BookishlyJewish Review

A Warning About Swans by R. M. Romero: Goodreads | Bookshop | Amazon

When The Angels Left The Old Country by Sacha Lamb: Goodreads | Bookshop | Amazon | BookishlyJewish Review

Dear Eliza

The cover of Dear Eliza, The back of a blonde woman. She is holding a green envelope. Peeking out from the envelope is a white piece of paper with the title written on it.

Dear Eliza

Andrea J. Stein

Flash point books, October 8, 2024

336 pages

Review by: E. Broderick

It’s a good idea to start a book with some action, or a large emotional moment, to quickly grab the reader and immerse them in the characters world. In Dear Eliza by Andrea J. Stein the first chapter opens on a shiva. The main character, Eliza, is mourning her father. This officially makes her an orphan since her mother passed when Eliza was in high school. Immediately, it becomes clear to readers that there is some serious family drama between Eliza and her stepmother. Plus, her brother is fraying at the edges. We are definitely in a major emotional moment and it only gets more intense from there. 

In a shocking reveal, Eliza learns that her now deceased father wasn’t really her biological father. It’s a secret her mother kept even when she knew she was dying, only revealing it via a letter that she wrote to be opened by Eliza after the passing of the man that raised her and she considers her father. What a way to end a shiva. Understandably, Eliza does not handle the news well. Less understandably, her stepmother tries to use this as a means to remove Eliza from the will, and Eliza’s brother disagrees with how Eliza chooses to handle the entire situation.

There’s a lot of emotional tension, but the book also features a sweet romance. Readers with weight and diet issues might want to go in knowing that Eliza tends to grieve by starving herself. While this is never officially labeled as an eating disorder, there is a lot of talk about food restriction, intake, and weight that certainly felt, at the very least, eating disorder adjacent to me. There’s also a fair amount of privilege in Eliza’s life and job, and while she does acknowledge it, it’s still fairly glaring. This is not the life and career of your typical twenty something.

The nice thing about Dear Eliza was watching not only Eliza’s grieving process but also her relearning how to relate to her parents and family in general. She realizes that her mother, who is responsible for a fair amount of the privilege she enjoys, is also responsible for a lot of the current mess she’s in. Her brother, whom she has always turned to for support, might himself need some help sometimes, and her stepmother isn’t necessarily a good digging demon. Nobody is perfect, especially Eliza. 

While all of that might seem heavy, this is a quick read. The prose is smooth and the pages turn quickly. When Eliza finds her happy ending the reader is genuinely happy for her and optimistic about her future. We open on high drama but we end on comfort. Who could ask for anything better?

Note: BookishlyJewish received an arc of this book from the publisher


Find it: Goodreads | Bookshop | Amazon

Authority

The cover of Authority. The profile of a young woman's head and neck, sowing a star of david necklace at her throat. Her hair is overlaid with red circuitry and in its center is a computer chip.

Authority

by: Jamie Krakover

August 20, 2024 Snowy Wings Publishing

352 pages

Review by: E. Broderick

It’s always nice to revisit an old friend – unless of course that friend turns out to be the most complicated part of your life. In Authority, the sequel to Jamie Krakover’s YA sci- fi Tracker220, readers will be pleased to catch up with main character Kaya Weiss and learn how she is faring after bringing down the tracker network that allowed the authorities an unprecedented ability to not only monitor people, but also to control them. However, readers will also get to revisit a less beloved friend – Kaya’s tracker is working again. Several other trackers are also working in highly undesirable ways. Kaya and crew must figure out who is exploiting the supposedly dormant devices and how to stop them.

Per usual, I found Kaya’s taste in men to be very suspect. I did not care for her ex, and I do not care for her currently boyfriend or the way either of these guys treats her. Possibly this has to do with my overall aversion to large doses of testosterone, especially when it comes to jealousy. However, when the tracker network is activated once again by someone trying to manipulate people, Kaya herself shows lapses in judgement far more egregious than her dating choices. She trusts some people too quickly while at the same time rushing off and attempting to fix things on her own in order to try and spare those she loves. Meanwhile the reader is left yelling at their e-reader, reminding her you can’t trust sociopaths (OK maybe just this reader, but still). There’s a lot of room for growth here from almost all the characters – and they do so over the course of the book.

What I really enjoyed was Kaya’s complicated relationship with her father. When we learn that all the shenanigans in the last book were due to Mr. Weiss giving his daughter a special gift and then completely neglecting to tell her about it or the resulting danger it puts her in, readers are understandably miffed at the guy. It’s nice to learn that Kaya is too. She and her father have to hash it out over the next few pages and what results is also a microcosm of one of the larger questions of the book – how much do we shield others instead of letting them make their own choices and what price are we willing to pay in either direction? Turns out a universe without trackers isn’t quite the utopia everyone thought it would be. But life with them wasn’t so great either. 

The most delightful bit in the book has to do with an artificial intelligence. I do not approve of AI in the writing process or in the cover design process, but I am very open to them as plot devices in sci fi! Authority is human written and human designed and I enjoyed seeing what actual uses Krakover could come up with for the AI character in her book. Here’s a hint- it has nothing to do with replacing humans. If current humans could take a leaf from her book maybe we’d actually use this technology in ways that benefit people.

The title Authority is apt- authority and who should wield it over another, is indeed the question the reader is thinking about as the book closes. Who gets to set the rules and why? How do we monitor that process? It’s a timely question that I hope will lead young readers to engage thoughtfully on this topic. 

Note: BookishlyJewish received an e-arc of this book from the author


Find It: Goodreads | Bookshop | Amazon

Reader’s Choice 2024 – SFF

Space if the background. The title reads"Reader's Choice SFF". Around it are the covers of the following books: Spinning Silver, The Familiar, Wrath Becomes Her, Hereville, Eternal Life, Naomi Teitelbaum Ends The World, Starglass, Majority

Continuing on with the genre reveals, today we feature the science fiction and fantasy picks! We’ve got reviews up for four of these books, plus an author interview for a fifth. And one is burning a hole in my kindle just waiting to be read.

Eternal Life by Dara Horn: Bookshop | Amazon

The Familiar by Leigh Bardugo: Bookshop | Amazon

Hereville by Barry Deutsch: Bookshop | Amazon | BookishlyJewish Review

Naomi Teitelbaum Ends the World by Samara Shanker: Bookshop | Amazon | BookishlyJewish Review

The Pomegranate Gate by Ariel Kaplan: Bookshop | Amazon | BookishlyJewish Review

Roma Eterna by Robert Silverberg: Bookshop | Amazon

Spinning Silver by Naomi Novick: Bookshop | Amazon | BookishlyJewish Review

Starglass by Phoebe North: Bookshop | Amazon | BookishlyJewish Review

Torth Majority by Abby Goldsmith: Author Interview| Amazon

Wrath Becomes Her by Aden Polydoros: Bookshop | Amazon

2024 Reader’s Choice – Romance

Fancy Script reading: Romance 2024 Readers Choice. Around it are the covers of the following books: The Spells Disaster, Today, Tonight, Tomorrow, Meant to be Mine, Marry Me By Midnight, A Kiss From The Past, Celestial Persuasion, The Matzah Ball, Unorthodox Love, Mt. Perfect on Paper.

Today we reveal the Reader’s Picks for ROMANCE, and as a sign of my long lasting devotion to the subject, I am pleased to report that BookishlyJewish already has a review up for nine out of ten of these books. We have the full gamut of heat levels represented here, and I suspect those who know me can easily guess which pick was mine. XOXO

As a personal aside, Jewish romance writers are really fun and they were some of the first people in the industry to send BookishlyJewish arcs and also welcomed me into their spaces as a writer before I was published. Thank you romance writers for your continued support. I hope to keep covering your gorgeous books for many years to come and have one of mine up there someday keeping yours company.

Find The Books:

Celestial Persuasion by Mir Ines Trupp: Amazon | BookishlyJewish Review

A Kiss From the Past by Kelly Cain: Bookshop | Amazon | BookishlyJewish Review

Marry Me by Midnight by Felicia Grossman: Bookshop | Amazon | BookishlyJewish Review

The Matzah Ball by Jean Meltzer: Bookshop |Amazon

Meant To Be Mine by Hannah Orenstein: Bookshop | Amazon | BookishlyJewish Review

Mr. Perfect on Paper by Jean Meltzer: Bookshop | Amazon | BookishlyJewish Review

This Spells Disaster by Tori Anne Martin: Bookshop | Amazon | BookishlyJewish Review

Today Tonight Tomorrow by Rachel Lynn Solomon: Bookshop | Amazon | BookishlyJewish Review

Unorthodox Love by Heidi Shertok: Bookshop | Amazon | BookishlyJewish Review

Want even more romance recommendations? Check out the adult fiction page or the YA fiction page

2024 – Reader’s Choice Nonfiction

Favorite Nonfiction. The following Book Covers are laid out:
The Story Of The Jews, John Lennon and the Jews, Wrestling with God and Men, Jews, God and History, My Life, People Love Dead Jews, On Repentance And Repair, A Bintel Brief, All Who Go Do Not Return, Survival in Auschwitz, Tuesdays With Morrie, The Choice, The Light of Days, From Meidelach to Matriarchs

Today is the nonfiction reveal, and I definitely have some work to do to expand the nonfiction section. I’ve read one of these and have plans to review it, but I need to get on the others ASAP. Calling all guest reviewers – help me out!

Find the Books:

A Bintel Brief by Issac Metzker: Bookshop | Amazon

All Who God Do Not Return by Shulem Deen: Bookshop | Amazon

Jews, God, and History by Max I. Dimont: Bookshop | Amazon

John Lennon And The Jews by Ze’ev Maghen: Bookshop | Amazon

The Light of Days by Judy Batalion: Bookshop | Amazon

My Life by Golda Meir: Amazon

On Repentance and Repair by Rabbi Danya Ruttenberg: Bookshop | Amazon

People Love Dead Jews by Dara Horn: Bookshop | Amazon

The Story of the Jews by Simon Schama: Bookshop | Amazon

Survival in Auschwitz by Primo Levi: Bookshop | Amazon

Tuesdays With Morrie by Mitch Albom: Bookshop | Amazon

The Choice by Dr. Edith Eva Eger: Bookshop | Amazon

Wrestling With God and Men by Steven Greenberg: Bookshop | Amazon

2024 Readers Choice Poll – Overall Best Jewish Book

Reader's Choice Overall Favorite Book. The following book covers are laid out: Mr. Perfect on Paper, The Schlimmiel Kids Save The Moon, A Mother's Secret, His Master's Voice, The Dovekeeper's, Herschel and the Hanukkah Goblin, People Love Dead Jews, The Weight of Ink, Max in The House of SPies, The Chosen, Eternal life, All Who Go Do Not Return, Thistlefoot, the Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay, The Red tent, Kissing Kosher, Exodus

I am really pleased to announce the reader picks in the “Best Overall Jewish Book” category.

I won’t tell you which books got the most votes, but I can share a few fun facts:

-BookishlyJewish has reviews up for five of them (links below)

-There’s an additional book I’ve read but still haven’t gotten around to reviewing

-Two are so high on my TBR I already own them. They stare at me balefully as I type this. (Can you guess which?)

-There’s a nice mix of fiction and nonfiction

-Three of these books were not on my radar, but now they are

-Our younger readers have participated! Plus some nostalgic grown ups! Love that we got some children’s literature on here.

Stay tuned as we release the results for individual categories throughout the week. There are a lot of fun and surprising picks. Your TBR is sure to grow.

Find the books: