A Synagogue Just Like Home
Age 4+
Picture Storybooks
A new rabbi’s efforts to fix up his aging synagogue are a labour of love – and a comedy of errors – until his congregants fondly pool their talents in this lighthearted celebration of community.
Rabbi Ruben loves his synagogue. But he doesn’t love the creaking floorboards, leaking sink, or drafty windows. Surely, he thinks, he can fix it up so it feels cared for, like a happy home! But Rabbi Ruben doesn’t know much about home repair, so when his creative fixes – challah dough plugging a drippy faucet, tablecloths blocking a window draft – make things humorously worse, it’ll take his whole congregation banding together to remind him what really makes a place feel like a happy home.
Alice Blumenthal McGinty’s warm, inviting text pairs with Laurel Molk’s lively, friendly illustrations for a story about community and coming together – sharing, helping, caring.
Creators
Alice Blumenthal McGinty is the award-winning author of 50 fiction and nonfiction books for children, including: the 2019 Jr. Library Guild Selection, The Girl Who Named Pluto: The Story of Venetia Burney illustrated by Elizabeth Haidle, the 2019 Northern Lights Book Award Winner (food category) Pancakes to Parathas: Breakfast Around the World illustrated by Tomoko Suzuki, the 2015 Sydney Taylor Notable book, Rabbi Benjamin's Buttons illustrated by Jennifer Black Reinhardt, and the picture book biography, Gandhi: A March To the Sea illustrated by Thomas Gonzales, which was awarded as an honor book for the 2014 South Asia Book Award for Children's And Young Adult Literature. In addition to being a writer, she is a writing coach and instructor. She lives in Illinois, USA.
Laurel Molk has written and illustrated several books for children and is the illustrator of There Might Be Lobsters by Carolyn Crimi. She has also exhibited in shows at the Society of Illustrators. She lives near Boston, USA.
Reviews
This warm, humorous tale is ably supported by lively mixed-media, digitally finished illustrations that affirm the story’s guiding principles of collaboration and cozy hominess. . . . Jewish audiences will appreciate familiar details in text and art, but the important message about the spirit of togetherness is universal. A delightful testament to the power of community.
Kirkus Reviews
Molk’s (There Might Be Lobsters) mixed-media art portrays an exuberantly participatory community of people with varying body types and skin tones, and kids who evince as much a sense of ownership as the grown-ups. Final scenes set in the glow of the Shabbat candles have a quiet, profound beauty: deep faith, immense joy, and unshakable belonging radiate from the pages.
Publishers Weekly
This lighthearted tale with dazzling, diverse illustrations winks to its audience (“I’ll be quiet as a deli on Yom Kippur”) as it delivers a quiet message about the value of working together to make our shared spaces bright.
Foreword Reviews
Molk’s illustrations capture Jewish traditions in vibrant watercolor style. . . The artwork brings to life the water, light from the candles, and humor in the repairs. . . . Art and story are infused with elements of Jewish tradition in a way that is accessible to all readers and listeners, regardless of faith.
School Library Journal