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Golemcrafters

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
On the same day Faye's brother comes home with a black eye, a package arrives from a relative they've never met. It's a slab of clay: some weird kind of bar mitzvah present?
The strange gift turns out to be an invitation to learn a craft that's been in their family for centuries. And it's not pottery.
Faye and Shiloh are driven to New York City by their grandfather for a spring break filled with magical instruction. But at night they find themselves transported to a strange parallel world, where groups of innocent people are facing appalling hatred and violence. Are Faye and Shiloh destined to defend them?
How is that possible for a brainy, unpopular eleven-year-old and her vulnerable older brother?
It will take all the strength they can draw from their Jewish and Japanese heritage to not only crack the mystery of this alternate world, but to find in them the power to confront the troubles of their present.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      September 23, 2024
      An unanticipated bar mitzvah gift—“a box of uncured clay” for 11-year-old Faye’s older brother Shiloh—results in a visit from the siblings’ estranged paternal grandfather in this ethereal fantasy novel by Watanabe Cohen (The Lost Ryu). To combat rising antisemitism, including the bullying Shiloh has been experiencing, their grandfather wants them to learn golemcrafting: creating humanoid figures from clay that are “brought to life with the Hebrew alphabet.” Their father disagrees, but their Catholic mother, a second-generation Japanese American, believes this will help them learn more about their Jewish heritage. Faye feels secretly triumphant when she demonstrates a gift for golemcrafting over academically inclined Shiloh. But when, in a shared dream, the siblings are transported to a fantasy realm where Japanese Jewish people are being hunted, Faye’s pride turns to rage. Suddenly saddled with incredible power, Faye’s rage evolves into fear she struggles to overcome alone. Watanabe Cohen explores centuries of antisemitism through the eyes of two characters experiencing it in the present to show the import of personal resilience and reliance on family in the face of adversity. Ages 8–12. Agent: Mary C. Moore, Aevitas Creative.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      Author Emi Watanabe Cohen narrates her second novel, a story of Jewish identity and magic. When Faye's estranged Jewish grandfather sends her older brother a lump of clay for his bar mitzvah, the gift propels the two kids into an adventure in Jewish history and culture. Listeners will assume that this is a conventional middle-grade fantasy, but it turns complex and dark about halfway through. Up to this point, Cohen's narration is competent but relatively free of affect, lending the story none of its wonder. But with the turn of events, her voice fills with emotion, and listeners will be caught up as Faye finds her place in a tradition of suffering and rootlessness, ferocity and resilience. Patient listeners will be richly rewarded. V.S. © AudioFile 2025, Portland, Maine

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  • English

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