Even though this book is listed as a children's book, the language and themes, I think, appeal more to an adult reader. Some stories are full of bewilderment and anecdotes that are typical of childhood memories, and all of the stories reveal details of ordinary everyday life and how Judaism translates in the behaviour, mind-set, and rituals of the author, his family, and neighbours. The stories also reflect upon religion, God, morality, philosophy, hunger, poverty, family dynamics, and war, among numerous other topics. A very insightful, albeit simple, read.
I looked up at the sky, saw the sun, the clouds, and suddenly I understood more clearly the meaning of the words of Genesis. This, then, was the world God had created: the earth, the heavens, the waters above that are separated by the firmament by the waters below.
I wished that like some hero in a storybook I might leap from the moving train and lose myself amid green things.