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A SONG FOR MY SISTER by Lesley  Simpson

A SONG FOR MY SISTER

by Lesley Simpson & illustrated by Tatjana Mai-Wyss

Pub Date: June 26th, 2012
ISBN: 978-1-58246-427-5
Publisher: Random House

There is no specific Jewish ritual for naming a daughter, so many families invent their own. Simpson has invented an entire book to go with it.

Wishes come true here, but not right on time. Mira wishes for a sister, and a baby is born four years later. Sound effects are important in this book. When Mira tosses coins into a wishing well, they go “Swish clink clank.” The baby makes one noise, “Waaaaaaa!”—there are always seven as in a row. She cries when her parents try to feed her and when Mira bounces her or shows off her best cartwheel. The word “Waaaaaaa!” appears in bright red letters, and readers might get tired of seeing it on page after page, but then, that’s the point. By the day of the naming ceremony, even the rabbi looks a little worn out. (Progressive readers will be happy to see that she’s a female rabbi.) Mira, of course, saves the day, if not right on time. The book ends with the sounds of Jewish music, Mira singing “Dim-dim-dee-dee-dim” and her sister singing “Goo-goo-ga-ga-ga.” Even young readers may see the plot twists coming, but the details are funny (Mira wants to name the baby Siren), the ending is genuinely moving, and some families may want to borrow the naming ritual for themselves.

A neat melding of religious traditions into the familiar new-sibling story.

(Picture book. 3-8)