Description

Book Synopsis

“A fablelike introduction to the Holocaust for the youngest audiences.” – Kirkus Reviews

Separated from her family, Ruthi struggles to find hope in this universal story of loss and love, by holding tight to a childhood promise.

Ruthi’s cheerful world changes the day soldiers stomp through her town. Separated from her family, alone and afraid, she manages to survive the war, and is brought to Israel where she recovers and learns to live again. Many years later she reunited with her brother Leib and they promised never to be separated again.




Trade Review

A fablelike introduction to the Holocaust for the youngest audiences. Ruthi and Leib frolic happily in a field gathering flowers with their mother. But when "soldiers stomped brutish boots into town," their mother goes off to find food and never returns. The siblings are separated in an orphanage, and Ruthi goes to a nightmarish place "where numbers replaced names." She survives the war, emigrates, builds a life for herself as an adult, and, in her old age, reunites with her brother. Reminiscent of the stylings of Art Spiegleman's Maus, the children—based on compiled stories of Jewish youth, according to an author's note—are represented as rabbits (albeit with "blonde curls" on Leib and straight, dark locks that flow past Ruthi's ears), with other animal people present in background scenes. Adults looking for tools to introduce the subject of the Holocaust will find a helpful beginning in this emotion-driven story. (Picture book. 5-8)

— Kirkus Reviews


Hand in Hand

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    £12.99

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    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Wed 1 Jul 2026.

    A Hardback by Andrea Warmflash Rosenbaum, Maya Shleifer

    Out of stock


      View other formats and editions of Hand in Hand by Andrea Warmflash Rosenbaum

      Publisher: Behrman House Inc.,U.S.
      Publication Date: 16/08/2018
      ISBN13: 9781681155388, 978-1681155388
      ISBN10: 1681155389

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      “A fablelike introduction to the Holocaust for the youngest audiences.” – Kirkus Reviews

      Separated from her family, Ruthi struggles to find hope in this universal story of loss and love, by holding tight to a childhood promise.

      Ruthi’s cheerful world changes the day soldiers stomp through her town. Separated from her family, alone and afraid, she manages to survive the war, and is brought to Israel where she recovers and learns to live again. Many years later she reunited with her brother Leib and they promised never to be separated again.




      Trade Review

      A fablelike introduction to the Holocaust for the youngest audiences. Ruthi and Leib frolic happily in a field gathering flowers with their mother. But when "soldiers stomped brutish boots into town," their mother goes off to find food and never returns. The siblings are separated in an orphanage, and Ruthi goes to a nightmarish place "where numbers replaced names." She survives the war, emigrates, builds a life for herself as an adult, and, in her old age, reunites with her brother. Reminiscent of the stylings of Art Spiegleman's Maus, the children—based on compiled stories of Jewish youth, according to an author's note—are represented as rabbits (albeit with "blonde curls" on Leib and straight, dark locks that flow past Ruthi's ears), with other animal people present in background scenes. Adults looking for tools to introduce the subject of the Holocaust will find a helpful beginning in this emotion-driven story. (Picture book. 5-8)

      — Kirkus Reviews


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