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Isaac Samuel ben Baruch Reuben--whose first name meant laughter--was a late-born miracle. His mother had wanted a child so badly that in her Sukkot prayers, she promised to love even a child "no bigger than a thumb." Sure enough, before a year had passed, she gave birth to a son. And sure enough, he was no bigger than her thumb. She blanketed him in the flax she had used to wrap an etrog--the Israeli citrus fruit used to celebrate Sukkot--and cradled him in a hand-carved etrog box.
The 16 stories here were selected from Weilerstein's three K'tonton volumes--The Adventures of K'tonton (1935); K'tonton in Israel (1964) and K'tonton on an Island in the Sea (1976).
An educational director and Chazan, whose students loved the tales, recommended the book. I am glad I followed up, because my son adores this magical little fellow. Each evening's story hour brings eager requests not for one or two stories, but three.
Each tale is filled with details about important Jewish ideas or traditions, and a dash of Jewish humor. Take K'tonton's slide down the side of a chopping bowl in which his mother was mixing Shabbat gefilte fish. He wanted a ride on the chopping knife. He predictably ended up covered in fish, a vision (illustrated in beautiful black and white ink) that makes kids ring with the laughter of Isaac.
Similarly, children emit gales of laughter on hearing of K'tonton's ride on the tip of a lulav--the palm branch that is pointed east, west, south and north, to the heavens and to earth as part of the harvest celebration of Sukkot. As K'tonton's father and the entire congregation stand to chant Hodu l'Adonai ki tov--Praise the Lord for God is good--there was K'tonton singing in a high treble that rose above all the other voices. Even more hilarious is the spinning Chanukah dreidel that carried him off the table, down the stairs, out the door, into the street and into a gutter, where K'tonton found a small bit of Chanukah money known in Yiddish as gelt.
K'tonton also turned up in a Purim cookie, a Hamentash, covered with poppy seeds, and tried to feed a hungry cat on Yom Kippur. He also got lost at the beach and was carried on the back of a seagull to an island in the sea, where he welcomed the Sabbath Queen with fireflies instead of candles and the bountiful harvest of the wilderness. On the island, he also shared wild fruit and seed bread on Shavuot, the celebration of the gift of Torah, with his new family--Mouse, Rabbit, birds, Turtle and Toad.
In the last four stories, K'tonton made his way to Israel inside the suitcase of a friend's aunt. There, in Jerusalem, he celebrated Pesach, the redemption of the Hebrew slaves, and righted some wrongs.
If your children don't love this book, I'll eat my hat. Alyssa A. Lappen
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K'tonton in Israel appeared in 1964 as a sequel to The Adventures of K'tonton (1935). There were 23 stories in the first edition (which I own); I hope they're all in the 3-volume 1984 reprint.
An educational director and Chazan recommended K'tonton to me and I am glad I followed up. My son adores the magical little main character. Each evening's story hour brings eager requests not for one or two stories, but three. Each tale has a complex all its own and is filled with details of important Jewish ideas or traditions, and a dash of Jewish humor.
K'tonton, Hebrew for very very little, was the nickname of Isaac Samuel ben Baruch Reuben-whose first name meant laughter. He was a late-born miracle for whom his mother had prayed so hard one Sukkot that she promised to love even a child "no bigger than a thumb." Sure enough, before a year had passed, she gave birth to a son. And sure enough, he was no bigger than her thumb. She blanketed him in the flax she had used to wrap an etrog--the Israeli citrus fruit used to celebrate Sukkot--and cradled him in a hand-carved etrog box.
In this book's first story, K'tonton went to Israel on an El Al jet-inside the suitcase of a friend's aunt. Next, he went up to Jerusalem, passing an Israel National Fund forest, where a tree was planted when he was born. The third tale took K'tonton to Jerusalem for a special celebration of Pesach, the redemption of the Hebrew slaves.
The fourth found K'tonton at Mount Zion, which in 1964 had Israel's only view of Jerusalem's Old City, the Temple Mount and HaKotel, the Temple's remaining Western Wall. Two more stories brought K'tonton adventures with the President of Israel and children who mistook him for a puppet. How he escaped I won't tell.
K'tonton next obtained wisdom from a donkey, as in ancient times. K'tonton met Jewish and Arab children in a Hadassah clinic. He traveled to Ramat Rahel for more shenanigans. In the tenth tale, he made his way via an Arab milk wagon to Rachel's tomb near Bethlehem.
K'tonton's size allowed him to easily hide. Thus in the 11th story he washed his face in dew, jumped into a vegetable basket a woman carried on her head, said his morning prayers: "Glorify the Lord, O Jerusalem" and made it to the gates of the Old City. In the 12th, K'tonton caused a stir in the market (I can't say how) and met an understanding tourist.
In seven more stories K'tonton prayed for peace at HaKotel, found a treasure, visited a desert kibbutz, Tel Aviv, Ashkelon, an observatory at Haifa's Mount Carmel, outer space, Beersheba, the Dead Sea-and took a wild ride on a goat. He discovered some ancient prayer scrolls and saved a crop of wheat from an army of mice. (What you read here are mere hints. I'm not allowed to tell the details.)
Each of the 23 stories in this book has its own adventure-filled plot. Each also contains treasures to match those K'tonton found in Eretz Yisrael. Alyssa A. Lappen
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The Adventures of K'tonton (1935) was printed at least 10 times (we own the 10th edition). K'tonton in Israel appeared in 1964 as a sequel and was in turn followed by K'tonton on and Island in the Sea (1976) and K'tonton in the Circus in 1981. I recently ordered the last, expecting a picture-book with one Hanukkah story. Low and behold, this 86-page volume contains 15 delightful K'tonton tales.
The book opens with a brief obligatory reintroduction of the magical little main character: Isaac Samuel ben Baruch Reuben's first name meant laughter, but his parents called him K'tonton--Hebrew for very very little--on account of his four-inch height. He was raised on milk with honey added from the land of Israel, and by age three could recite verses from Torah the way other children say nursery rhymes. As in all K'tonton volumes, each tale is filled with details of important Jewish ideas or traditions, and a dash of Jewish humor.
Here, as the title implies, K'tonton joined the circus. He had traveled from Brooklyn to South Carolina to visit his aunt. In her yard, K'tonton sat under her fig tree. Its vine reminded him of the biblical verse, "Nations shall beat their swords into plowshares, their spears into pruning hooks." All that day, he dreamed of the Messiah, and the next day, the first day of Kislev, his father tucked him into his pocket to go to synagogue.
After services, he sat on the window sill thinking of Elijah the prophet while his father talked to the Rabbi. He was singing softly, Am Yisrael Chai (The people Israel lives) when the sound of a trumpet rang, and a tall bearded man in a cape rode by on a bicycle. "Elijah, Elijah, you've come!" K'tonton shouted. Needless to say, the bike rider was not Elijah at all, but a circus man who brought K'tonton not to Jerusalem, as the Jewish Tom Thumb had expected, but in a circus tent.
Before long, K'tonton found himself at work as a main attraction in the Sideshow tent, where he met the Wild Man of Borneo and a Sword Swallower, who could not beat his sword into a plowshare, lest he lose his job. In another story, K'tonton met Mama Belle, Lillibelle and Papa Joe, a family of acrobats who cleared a small nook for him in their cramped trailer. When they saw he wasn't eating, and he explained that he must keep kosher, they found him bread, popcorn, boiled eggs and tuna.
In the fifth story, K'tonton visited the lion's cage--giving a kindergarten class visiting that day a major fright. The circus master warned him to be careful around animals that were once wild. To this, K'tonton objected fiercely. "When the Messiah comes," he said knowingly, "the lambs will lie down with the lions." Well, the master agreed, he could go into the cage again--but only after the Messiah came.
In the next story, Daisy, the Fat Lady, threatened to go on strike and lose most of her 410 pounds if the Big Boss didn't let K'tonton observe the Sabbath. (I won't tell what else happened.)
Stories seven, eight, nine and ten introduced K'tonton to the horses and camels, and elephants. K'tonton learned how a seal named Baby came into the circus, which involved a mitzvah--a good deed. K'tonton helped arrange a benefit, another mitzvah. K'tonton met Clarence, a clown who figured he was useless. K'tonton told Clarence about the Prophet Elijah, who had once noted that two clowns could count on going to heaven, since they "cause laughter and make sad hearts glad." K'tonton cheered Clarence, but himself grew despondent for reasons I can't reveal.
In the 12th story of this book K'tonton finally celebrated Hanukkah. This was even more original than the first Hanukkah celebration, in which he rode a dreidel off the edge of a table, down a flight or stairs and right into the street. K'tonton explained a thing or two, made some latkes and gave presents. This tale also featured a dreidel, but not the sort you might think.
After several more adventures, K'tonton made it home to his parents. How? Alas, I must keep that secret too. But in these stories, the circus barker is still shouting about K'tonton, and kids just love him. Yours will too. Alyssa A. Lappen
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I had no idea that having this new cookbook would be so rewarding!
Alice Toklas has some INCREDIBLE recipes in here (Scheherezade Melon being a favorite!), all of which should be tried and enjoyed.
Furthermore, this book contains recipes you simply wont find in other, newer, cookbooks. My girlfriend really summed this book up by suggesting that the recipes in this book are the recipes you know exist -- but are being passed from grandmother to granddaughter; you simply dont get these unless youre in that circle of people.
This cookbook is your way in to exquisite dishes that were prepared for the likes of Gertrude Stein, Hemmingway, Picasso, and Matisse.
That, and where else are you going to find a recipe for Hashish Fudge?
This book has my whole-hearted, overwhelming approval.
This classic of 20th century food lit appears every few years and rightfully so. First published in 1954 by Alice B. Toklas, the life partner of Gertrude Stein, established Alice as a writer in her own right and made her world-famous(once again) with her "Haschich Fudge" aka Alice B. Toklas brownies! This recipe, which was not included in the first American edition, but was included in the British edition, does appear in this book. It's more than a cookbook, it's an affectionate remembrance by someone who knew and was known by some of the artistic giants of the 20th century.