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A Rosh Hashanah Walk

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A charming rhyme that explains the Rosh Hashanah custom of tashlich, symbolically tossing one's sins into a stream of flowing water.

32 pages, Paperback

First published June 1, 1987

6 people want to read

About the author

Carol Levin

2 books3 followers
Carol Bloom Levin is the author & illustrator of HAGGADAH REGATTA. The family Haggadah combines the best parts of the Passover seder with a tale of a little matzah raft. Two kids sail the raft with a crew of stomping shoes. Lyrical illustrations and a friendly Hebrew Phonetics User Guide add fresh insights on seder traditions.

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Hilary .
2,294 reviews491 followers
September 8, 2020
I was attracted by the cover but the inside illustrations aren't nearly as nice and do look dated and odd on some pages. I was interested in learning about the custom of throwing your sins into the water for Rosh Hashanah but I found this much the same as goodreads friend Abigail, disjointed with unappealing artwork.

Read on open library.
Profile Image for Abigail.
8,038 reviews267 followers
September 8, 2020
A group of young New Yorkers take an afternoon Rosh Hashanah walk in this seasonal picture-book, thinking about the things they have done wrong over the course of the preceding year. When they come to the water - they are clearly in Brooklyn, looking across the East River toward southern Manhattan - they performs the ritual of Tashlich, casting crumbs into the water to symbolize the casting away of the year's sins...

Published in 1987, A Rosh Hashanah Walk is one of a number of picture-books to address the custom of Tashlich, traditionally performed at Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year. More recent examples would be April Halprin Wayland's New Year at the Pier: A Rosh Hashanah Story and Susan Schnur's Tashlich at Turtle Rock . Eric A. Kimmel's powerful Gershon's Monster: A Story for the Jewish New Year also touches upon this practice. Unfortunately, although I was interested to read Carol Levin's story, I found it fairly weak and unappealing. Written partly in rhyme, and partly in prose, the text here felt awkward, particularly when switching between the two, and the narrative itself was unremarkable and uninspiring. The accompanying artwork from Katherine Janus Kahn, who also illustrated Sylvia A. Rouss's Sammy Spider series about the Jewish holidays, is done in an interesting style that mixes photographic and other paper elements. I didn't find it particularly appealing, from an aesthetic perspective, although I was moved by the scene in which the children see the twin towers of the World Trader Center from across the river. That's a sight that is not to be seen today.

All in all, this wasn't particularly impressive, and is not one I would particularly recommend. It isn't terrible, but there are better titles (see above) out there with this theme.
Profile Image for Amy Bodkin.
199 reviews7 followers
September 22, 2019
Sweet and lyrical, but not much substance. My favorite part was seeing the Twin Towers in the pictures.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews

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