|
The Schmutzy Family
Paperback / softback
Main Details
Title |
The Schmutzy Family
|
Authors and Contributors |
By (author) Madelyn Rosenberg
|
|
Illustrated by Paul Meisel
|
Physical Properties |
Format:Paperback / softback | Pages:32 | Dimensions(mm): Height 242,Width 241 |
|
ISBN/Barcode |
9780823442416
|
Classifications | Dewey:813.6 |
---|
Audience | |
|
Publishing Details |
Publisher |
Holiday House Inc
|
Imprint |
Holiday House Inc
|
Publication Date |
11 September 2018 |
Publication Country |
United States
|
Description
Sunday through Friday, the Schmutzy children are encouraged to explore, experiment, and create. It's messy work, involving mud pies, tomato sauce, worms, and frogs! But on Friday morning, Mama exclaims, "Look at this dirt....And it's nearly SHABBOS. We can't bring in the Sabbath smelling like COWS!" Here is a lively celebration of Sabbath traditions!
Author Biography
Madelyn Rosenberg is a journalist and picture book author. Kirkus Reviews called THE SCHMUTZY FAMILY "delightful and unpretentious." This is her first novel for children. She lives in Virginia. Paul Meisel is the author and illustrator of See Me Run, a Theodor Seuss Geisel Honor Book, and See Me Dig, a Kirkus Reviews Best Book, and is the illustrator of many books for young people, including The Schmutzy Family by Madelyn Rosenberg, a Sydney Taylor Honor Book. He lives in Connecticut.
Reviews"Delightful and unpretentious in its approach to welcoming the Sabbath."-Kirkus Reviews "Stories filled with muck and mess are fun for young preschoolers, and in this title they will enjoy the smelly, yucky games celebrated on each wild double-page spread, especially since-surprise!-the grown-ups join in the fun. . . . With ink, watercolor, acrylic, and pencil, Meisel's pictures extend the rumpus, and kids will have fun with the text's occasional Yiddish words (explained in a glossary), especially farshtunken (stinky)."-Booklist "Rosenberg's text is elegant, affectionate, and humorous. Meisel's cartoon-like watercolor-and-ink illustrations sprawl across the borderless pages, embodying the story's creative expansiveness. Children will enjoy picking out details not mentioned in the text . . . This book explores Jewish traditions in a unique and vibrant way, offering a loving portrait of a free-wheeling family many readers will wish they had."-School Library Journal "Meisel's (The Leprechaun Under the Bed) ink-and-watercolor cartooning cheerfully chronicles the family's transformation from profane (which in this case involves a lot of mud, cow pies, and swamp critters) to sacred, and conveys so much joyousness and family happiness that most readers-even non-Jews-will agree that having to bathe, clean house, and dress up is well worth it."-Publishers Weekly A Finalist for the National Jewish Book Award
|