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"The summer I turned eight my family moved from the suburban town I had lived in all my life to a neighboring community six miles away. For my parents, who had spent their childhood fleeing Hitler, the change meant little more than an additional bedroom or two for their growing family of four sons. But for me, the sudden loss of neighborhood and friends seemed an upheaval as great as any they had endured during the 1930s. In an instant I became an outsider, a stranger, the new kid on the block. The shock awakened me from the cozy sleep of infancy and thrust me overnight into the great world of newspapers and radios and books, a world full of mystery and menace and wonder.
"It was a fascinating and fearsome time to wake up: John Kennedy, was about to be elected president, the threat of nuclear war hung in the air, and the first cautious explorations of outer space coincided with the first tentative revelations of the horrors of the Holocaust.
"With the Cold War providing the persistent background hum of impending annihilation, a hum that filled the ears of every child of the fifties, I began to learn the I Holocaust's terrible lessons of mail's limitless capacity for evil. The more I read about those awful years, the more I realized that events played out on the world stage had enormous impact on my own life. Though my immediate family had escaped Unscathed from the flames if Europe, many distant relatives had not. And had it not been for the war, I would have grown up not as an American in a suburb of New York City but, like my parents, as a German citizen of Berlin or Dresden.
"There was one other central constellation in the firmament of my youth: love. I was blessed to fall in love early in life and remain that way. Within days of meeting my future wife I knew we would one day marry. Eight years later, after high school, college, and postgraduate studies, we did. A long period of infertility followed, but the., with the swiftness of a miracle, three children were born: a daughter and boy/girl twins. Ever since I have thought of myself as a father first; everything else has become secondary.
"Writing for me has always been an expression of gratitude, an outgrowth of the impulse to give thanks for love received, for children born, for the miraculous existence of the imagination. When I write for adults I often do so in a state of wonder, transfixed by blessings. When I write for children I try to recapture the eight-year-old boy I once was, a boy filled with a passionate interest in the unfolding world around him. And finally I write in the hope of leaving behind a legacy of thought and feeling that my children might one day mine, if not for answers at least for solace, in the recognition that we traveled the same road of doubt and discovery."
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A holocaust Chanukah story helps 7-year-old Seth grow wiser.,
By A Customer
This review is from: The Tie Man's Miracle : A Chanukah Tale (Hardcover)
What a wonderful book this is! Seven-year-old Seth is waiting impatiently for his father to get home on the last night of Chanukah when the Tie Man shows up at the front door. As the elderly door-to-door necktie vendor unties the cardboard box containng his wares, Seth fears he will delay the family's celebration. He asks the Tie Man "Isn't your family waiting for you?" just to hurry him out the door. But when the sight of Seth's baby sister Hannah leads the old man to join the famiy in the menorah lighting, Seth begins to wonder about that question in earnest. The Tie Man responds to his innocent, direct questions with a sad story about the loss of his wife and five children in a "terrible war,"; and with a happy story about wishing on Chanukah candles in the village of his youth. After the Tie Man leaves, Seth wishes with all his heart on the Chanukah candles for the Tie Man to get his family back.At the conclusion of the evening, Seth has learned that there are wants greater than his own. He has learned about loving concern for other people. And, he has learned about a world in which both concentration camp victims and wishes to Heaven are carried upward in a flicker of light and a whirl of smoke.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Beautiful, poignant, and expressive,
By A reader from New Hampshire (New Hampshire USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Tie Man's Miracle : A Chanukah Tale (Hardcover)
Although this is a children's book, it is a beautiful Chanukah story for all ages and faiths. (I'm an Italian Protestant, but my great-grandfather was Jewish, and I light a menorah each year in honor of my Jewish ancestry.) The simple words portray a moving event that makes me cry with sadness and joy each time I read this compassionate and graceful story.
5.0 out of 5 stars
A miraculous story,
This review is from: The Tie Man's Miracle : A Chanukah Tale (Hardcover)
This is a simply beautiful story. It is told with honesty and compassion. It is rare that I find such a meaningful tale amid all the commercialism of this season. I want to thank the author and illustrator for sharing their words, pictures and hearts. The world is a kinder, richer, more enlightened place because of them. One caveat: because of the reference to the Holocaust and the tie man losing his entire family, I would not recommend reading this to any child younger than seven. But all in all, just a thoughtful, moving classic-in-the-making.
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