As the Hanukkah party guest list keeps growing, Rachel's mom keeps sending her next door to borrow more latke ingredients, chairs, and other necessary items. Rachel keeps inviting Mrs. Greenberg to come to the party, but she just won't come! How can Rachel help spread the Hanukkah joy?
I love this hilarious tale about a Bubba who thinks she's inviting the rabbi in to eat her latkes, only to discover she's fed them all to a hungry bear! (Sadly out-of-print)
Rachel doesn't understand why her grandmother insists on using her ugly, old menorah. But then grandma tells her how, when she and Rachels recently-passed grandpa were first married, they didn't have money to buy a menorah and so grandpa made the old, ugly, one. (Also sadly out-of-print)
Mostly because I get excited to find a series character who's obligatory holiday book is about Hanukkah, not Christmas.
Which ones would you add?
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4 comments:
Committee member Yapha recommends Herschel and the Hanukkah Goblins by Eric Kimmel and Arthur Yorink's Flying Latke!
ooo thanks!
Love this post, Jen. And though you didn't explicitly mention it, it's more back-up on why holiday programming is problematic. (maybe Jewish kids don't want/need a "basic" Hannukkah storytime where you say, "What's a latke?!" and maybe you, as a non-Jewish librarian, shouldn't be presenting it just because you "think" you should.)
I like some of the titles from Kar-Ben. http://www.karben.com/Hanukkah_c_55.html they're great for Jewish titles in general. Oh! And HANNUKAH BEAR is back in print with an awesome new set of illustrations: http://www.holidayhouse.com/title_display.php?ISBN=9780823428557
Angie--
AW YEAH, HANUKKAH BEAR! That makes me happy.
I love Kar-Ben in general, but don't have a lot of first-hand knowledge of their Hanukkah books.
I've stayed out of the holiday programming debate because my feelings are way too muddled (and guilty because I'm in the middle of a Christmas movie series) but one comment I'll say is that so often it's not that the Hanukkah portion is basic, but that it's religious. It's a religious holiday, so explaining it is religious. Unless the Christmas story you're reading is about Jesus, the Hanukkah story needs to not be about the Miracle of the Oil, you know?
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