Big Bad Wolf's Yom Kippur

by David Sherrin (Author) Martín Morón (Illustrator)

Big Bad Wolf's Yom Kippur
Reading Level: 2nd − 3rd Grade

In this fractured fairy tale mash-up that explains the Jewish holiday of Yom Kippur, Bid Bad Wolf struggles to understand whether he has the capacity for change, and in the process discovers friendship among those he once thought of only as tasty snacks.

When Racoon invites the Big Bad Wolf to Yom Kippur services, Wolf agrees to go. While he is there, he hears how everyone can use Yom Kippur as a day to become better and brighter. Wolf's not so sure...a big bad wolf can't become good! Can he? Will helping the girl in a red hood, her granny, and the three little pigs show him the way?

It is a regular morning, and Big Bad Wolf is just getting ready for another day full of bad, when something very different happens. Raccoon knocks on his door to apologize for rummaging through his garbage and invites him to synagogue services. What first appears to Wolf as an opportunity for a giant lunch buffet becomes, instead, an opportunity for Wolf to experience a change of heart. Warmly welcomed by the rabbi, who claims anyone can become better and brighter just like the leaves in the forest as they change color in the fall, Wolf, wrapped in a peaceful moment, begins to wonder if he could do the same. He spends the day helping Little Red Riding Hood take care of her sick grandmother (even though he'd rather eat them both) and showing the three little pigs how to make their houses stronger. Despite the new feelings these kindnesses give him, deep down he doesn't believe a wolf can change, because he keeps making mistakes. But as the day ends, his new friends arrive with a feast to break their Yom Kippur fast and they want to share it with their helper, partner and friend, a Big Good Wolf.

Sharp, sly illustrations envelop this gently fractured fairy tale in humor and warmth, while the story includes many details that help explain Yom Kippur practices to young readers as they discover we can all return to our best selves, beginning with kindness and heartfelt apologies.

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Hardcover
$18.95

Kirkus Reviews

A solemn holiday is given an appealing, entertaining treatment well suited to young kids.

School Library Journal

When Raccoon invites the Big Bad Wolf to synagogue on Yom Kippur, Wolf envisions snagging something (or someone) tasty to eat. His arrival makes the other animals nervous, but the Rabbi, a bear, greets him with a hug. Wolf finds himself enjoying the service and is surprisingly moved by the Rabbi's message about "how the leaves change color each fall, and how everyone in the forest could also become a little better and brighter." When he meets Little Red Riding Hood on his walk home, does Wolf gobble her and her granny up? When he comes across the houses of the Three Little Pigs, does Wolf huff and puff and blow their houses down? Can a Big Bad Wolf change his ways? The detailed, expressive illustrations in warm orange and gold tones bring this inventive story to life. Clever names like Rabbi Dov and Cantor Tzipporah, as well as other small details in the illustrations, will delight readers in the know, but even without the charming author's note, the story is accessible to those unfamiliar with the holiday traditions. However, it is important to note that the depiction of cooking, eating, and working on the fast day might make the book unacceptable in some observant Jewish settings. VERDICT Pair with Steve Smallman's The Lamb Who Came for Dinner. Also, look to Gloria Koster's Little Red Ruthie: A Hanukkah Tale and Laura Aron Milhander's Not for All the Hamantaschen in Town for more fun Jewish holiday fairy tale twists.—Rachel Kamin

Copyright 2023 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

Review quotes



Classification
Fiction
ISBN-13
9781681156064
Lexile Measure
-
Guided Reading Level
-
Publisher
Apples & Honey Press
Publication date
August 20, 2023
Series
-
BISAC categories
JUV039060 - Juvenile Fiction | Social Themes | Friendship
JUV002250 - Juvenile Fiction | Animals | Wolves & Coyotes
JUV033020 - Juvenile Fiction | Religious | Jewish
JUV012040 - Juvenile Fiction | Fairy Tales & Folklore | Adaptations
JUV017090 - Juvenile Fiction | Holidays & Celebrations | Other, Religious
Library of Congress categories
Picture books
Fairy tales
Wolves
Yom Kippur

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