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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Weight of the Sky, January 3, 2007
This review is from: The Weight of the Sky (Hardcover)
Narrating this novel in a free verse style that reads like prose, sixteen year old Sarah tells the story of the summer she spends working on an Israeli kibbutz. For an American girl from a small, mainly Christian town, in Pennsylvania who considers herself a dork and an outsider, it is a transformative experience. Along with the thrill of belonging as a Jew in a Jewish land, Sarah experiences her first taste of independence and her first romantic encounters with boys. Her impressions of Israel, especially Jerusalem and the area of the Galilee where she works as a kibbutz volunteer, are idealistic but acute; they will evoke memories in any reader who has been already been there and will arouse curiosity in those who haven't. Her personal growth, achieved with some pain but also with much satisfaction, is beautifully portrayed; Sarah is a character with whom many teenage readers will identify and ultimately, admire. Other characters are seen through her eyes and emerge as distinct and dimensional individuals, especially the two Israeli boys to whom she is attracted. When one of them, a soldier, is killed, Sarah's almost idyllic summer is shattered and for the first time, she longs for the safety of her home in America. This incident is one of a few that relate to political issues and all of them are dealt with subtly, providing context for a story about living in present-day Israel and background to the lives and feelings of the young Israelis with whom Sarah interacts. The conclusion, once Sarah is back in the United States and applying to colleges, affirms her commitment to Israel and illustrates the options open to almost all Jewish American young people. This is the author's first novel and, like two other recent novels about contemporary Israel, Pnina Moed Kass's Real Time and Tammar Stein's Light Years, it is highly recommended for teenagers.
Reviewed by Linda R. Silver
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A beautifully written book, October 1, 2006
This review is from: The Weight of the Sky (Hardcover)
I worked on a kibbutz myself many years ago. And what Sandell is exactly right: it's foreign and beautiful and depressing all at once. Reading this book brought it all back to me. But it's a lot more than a novel about life on the kibbutz. Lisa Ann Sandell's novel is that rarest and most difficult of things to achieve: a readable novel in verse. At first I wasn't sure if I'd enjoy this. Frankly it's not the sort of thing I normally read. But once you get into it, the book reveals its true quality. This is billed as Young Adult fiction. And it's very useful as an introduction to life in modern Israel. Certainly it's not beyond any reasonably literate 12 year old. But the book deserves a much wider audience. Buy it for a child, yes. But make sure you also read it yourself. First class.
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Stellar Debut, March 6, 2006
This review is from: The Weight of the Sky (Hardcover)
Lisa Sandell's "The Weight of the Sky" is one of those rare books that linger long after you put them down. In Sarah, a teenaged-girl who spends a summer on a kibbutz in Israel, Sandell has created a compelling heroine, one whose voice, insight and sensitivity give the novel its air of lyrical enchantment. While Jewish readers are likely to revere Sarah's astute, piercing observations about contemporary Israel, "The Weight of the Sky" is, at heart, a universal novel; Sarah's soul-searching and her struggle to find her identity and gain her independence would undoubtedly resonate with young adult readers, regardless of their background. Finally, Sandell's decision to write the novel in short, lucid, poem-like chapters makes for a spellbinding reading experience, one that transforms the reader not only to an exotic land, Israel, but also into the mind of a clever, thoughtful young woman as she first awakens to her own identity. The book, in short, is masterful, and is a must for lovers of serious, beautiful fiction, be their age whatever it may.
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