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The Jewish immigrant experience in the early 1900s is touchingly and joyfully portrayed in this picture book based on the author's own grandfather.
Growing up in a shtetl in Russia, Nathan is always singing, and when he hears a famous opera soloist perform in a nearby town one day, he realizes that music could be his future. But he'll need to travel far from his loved ones and poor village in order to pursue that cherished goal. With his family's support he eventually journeys all the way to New York City, where hard work and much excitement await him. His dream is coming true, but how can he be fully happy when his family is all the way across the ocean?
Gr 1-3--The tale of Nathan, who has always loved to sing. His neighbors in his Russian shtet all taught him their songs: "He can lift your heart with his voice." From the time he hears an Italian opera singer visiting in a neighboring village, his dream is to study and sing opera; he works to raise the money until his parents judge him old enough to follow that dream. Digital illustrations in bold colors reimagine folk art, with scenes of forest, houses, and city streets. Ish-Shalom's illustrations lead readers' eyes through the portholes of a large ship, or across docks and city streets, in colorful art that finds contrasts and details of sharply defined and solid characters. Nathan's journey takes him across the ocean, but not to the country and city of his dreams. Within minutes of the ship's launch, he realizes he is on his way to New York, not Italy. From that moment, life is an adventure, and Nathan is always singing--from his earned passage in steerage to fancy dinners across the Atlantic, on street corners in New York, at weddings or onstage, and in meeting the love of his life. Inspired by the life of her grandfather who actually traveled first to another country while immigrating, Schubert recalls in an author's note the love of her family and the joy of their reuniting, reflected in the final page of illustrations that feature a joyous swirl of musical notes on a background of bold yellow that highlights families of different races and ethnicities in happy embrace. VERDICT This title pays tribute to courageous individuals, with an underlying message of the unbroken connection of family love.--Mary Elam, Learning Media Services, Plano I.S.D., TX
Copyright 2021 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.Everyone in the Russian shetl loves young Nathan's singing. "That Nathan!" say the neighbors. "He can lift your heart with his voice." The family scrimps and saves to send him to Italy for singing lessons, and what follows is a string of incredible events--the afterword notes that they're loosely based on Schubert's (Trailblazer) grandfather's life. Nathan mistakenly boards a boat bound for New York, earns his passage singing in the ship's dining room, gets scouted by a voice teacher while busking, makes an appearance on "a big Broadway stage," and meets his true love while working in a hat shop. He's finally reunited with his dearly missed family on Ellis Island, finding them amid the tumult by singing out so they recognize and follow his voice. The calm, reportorial narration sometimes dampens the dramatic tale filled with twists of fate, but artist Ish-Shalom's illustrations lend energy to the telling: the crisp, bright colors; simple but evocative detailing; and indomitable doll-like figures have the verve of modern folk art. Ages 4-8. Author's agent: Steven Chudney, the Chudney Agency. (Feb.)
Copyright 2021 Publishers Weekly, LLC Used with permission.