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J**E
Greenhorn: coming soon to a theater near you
In Greenhorn, Anna Olswanger transports her readers back to a time and a place: a yeshiva in Brooklyn in 1946. The author has a careful ear for dialogue, using it to reveal the interests and cultural influences of the adolescent-aged boys at the school. These influences range from the secular (Babe Ruth, Packards) to the religious (Yiddish movies, translating the Gemara). Her rendering of the rabbi's speech and syntax is pitch perfect, too.Particularly artful is the presentation (again, via dialogue) of the tentative and incomplete understanding which the American-born students of the day had about the events of the just-concluded war in Europe, and its devastating effects upon the orphaned boys from Poland who had just arrived. Their mutual incomprehension, starkly clear in the early going, is gradually bridged as a New Jersey boy, Aaron, reaches out to Daniel, who has arrived from Poland with little more than the clothes on his back and a precious box.Despite their differences, one factor which unites the two boys is a difficulty in expressing themselves. Daniel's reticence, it seems, may be a combination of a language barrier and perhaps lingering shock at the loss of his family, while Aaron stuggles with a speech impediment. Students coping with shyness or nervousness about public speaking will identify with and draw encouragement from the bond which forms between Aaron and Daniel.Greenhorn is brought to a crisp ending with a surprise which has been foreshadowed earlier to alert readers. Then, a second surprise: the Afterword propels us 35 years forward, to a real-life encounter in Jerusalem which neatly ties a ribbon around the central prop of the story, Daniel's mysterious box.If this sounds cinematic, it's intended to. Anna Olswanger's website, which is easy to find, reports that Greenhorn soon will be dramatized in a short film. Readers who enjoyed the book doubtless will want to learn more about its upcoming film version.
B**N
Great Story
This is a story about an alienated Jewish boy in 1946 who struggles to find a new life in America while still reeling from the trauma of the Holocaust and the loss of his parents. But the book is also about the pain of being bullied and the yearning for connection. It’s no small wonder how Olswanger painted such a heartfelt portrayal in so few pages. The writing is impeccable, and the illustrations do a nice job of amplifying the reading experience. Highly recommended!
C**D
Springboard for the Truth
I appreciated the writer's attitude about the real-life story--her decision not to make a chld's picture book of a tender, poignant, painful event in a man's life. The value of the book, as I see it, is that it can best serve as a springboard for introducing the account of the Holocaust to children. A grand opportunity for adults to decide how, and how much is appropriate, to tell the child/children.
B**L
Anna Olswanger reaches many emotional levels
Anna Olswanger wrote a lovely book that touches on the pain of a child of the Holocaust, the pain of a child being bullied, and the love developed through true childhood friendship. Awesome story.
L**L
Five Stars
This was an excellent choice for our Junior High Book Club.
C**T
A compelling and powerful examination of the healing value of friendship.
In 1946, a young orphan from Poland arrives at a New York yeshiva where he will study and live. Narrated by a stuttering boy named Aaron, this is the story of young Daniel, whose parents died in the Holocaust. Daniel is an extremely quiet boy who constantly clutches a tin box, the contents of which remain a noteworthy secret, and who becomes a topic of great interest to the yeshiva boys.Aaron, dubbed "Gravel Mouth" because he stutters, has a huge heart. Daniel knows nothing of America; yet he desperately needs a good friend. Aaron, the stutterer, has a heart of gold, but he is bullied by the other students. The connection is instantaneous. Daniel is handicapped because he speaks almost no English. Aaron speaks English, but his stuttering is a similar handicap. Together, they face an uncertain life and discrimination.Anna Olswanger (Shlemiel Crooks, 2005) has crafted a marvelous Holocaust book for youth. She carefully introduces the Shoah in a poignant and dramatic manner, without revealing the shocking violence and brutality inflicted by Nazis upon the innocent Jewish families of Europe. Instead, Greenhorn produces a sense of boyhood camaraderie within the encroaching shadow of the Holocaust. Instances of the terrifying violence and cruelty of the Holocaust are explored within the statements of Daniel's yeshiva companions. Here, Olswanger opens the door to a childlike exploration of the Holocaust between the child reader and a responsible adult.The mystery of the tin box in the unrelenting hands of Daniel drives this fascinating story ever-onward. The box is little more than a curiosity to the yeshiva boys. But to Daniel, it means everything. It is the only physical connection to his lost loved ones and a life increasingly distant. The contents of the tin box represent the unbound terror of Nazi genocide. This is humanity's darkest point in history. It is frightful beyond imagination. Yet, it equally serves as a powerful metaphor. While we can hold onto potent memories of lost love, we must bury the physical artifacts that prevent us from moving past the genocide and into a new life filled with wonder and potential.Familiarity between Aaron and Daniel evolves as Aaron's ubiquitous invitations to a close friendship gradually chip away the veneer of Daniel's frosty countenance. Everyone requires a special friend; someone that she or he can use as a sounding board for special memories and enticing new concepts, a person whose amity will never falter. Eventually, Daniel allows Aaron to view the astonishing contents of the box. As Daniel finds a true friend in Aaron, so does Aaron find his true voice in the unforeseen companionship. Eventually the other yeshiva boys join in and Daniel is accepted as part of the group.This is a book that families can share with children when it is time to introduce the concept of the Shoah. Although the tale exists in a yeshiva, replete with Jewish concepts and values, any family can comprehend losing loved ones as a child, as well as the powerful healing value of friendship.Ms. Olswanger is to be commended for careful attention to detail required by any historical work. The idiosyncrasies of colloquial American English of the period are reflected in the vernacular of the boy's verbal communication. The dialect of this communication is entirely appropriate, if not also creative. This book is enhanced even farther with the addition of many excellent illustrations, each one reflecting the environment, participants, the box, the boys' clothing and the emotional affect of the situation.Thankfully, few of us will ever be in a position of losing all of our loved ones to genocide. Hopefully, humanity will grow beyond the realm of mass murder based upon intolerance. Greenhorn proffers a child's perception of having his parents and family stripped away at a tender young age. Here we find a perfect launching point for a discussion of the Holocaust aimed at youthful learners. Alone in the world, poor Daniel clutches to the only artifacts of his parents in a tin box. Driven by abject fear and horrific personal loss, Daniel can only be saved by the tender mercy shown to him by a young yeshiva boy in New York. In this compelling symbiotic relationship, Aaron and Daniel heal each other.Reviewer Charles Weinblatt is the author of the novel, Jacob's Courage: A Holocaust Love Story (Mazo Publishers).
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