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Cursing Columbus

by Eve Tal
ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

The dream was always the same: I was back in Russia. My family was sitting around the Sabbath table: Mama, Papa, baby Hannah and my brothers Lemmel and Shloyme. I was telling a story about America—there were gold streets and chickens roosting in trees. Suddenly, Papa and I were on board a ship sailing far away. Ahead I saw the Statue of Liberty towering over the harbor of New York, but she raised her hand high above her head to stop us. I looked around for Papa. I was all alone.

Then I woke up and remembered.

Papa and I had arrived at Ellis Island. For three years we had been living on the Lower East Side of New York. Papa worked in a sweatshop earning money to bring over the rest of the family, while I worked after school. I dreamed of the day our family would be together again.

And tomorrow, it would finally happen. Would they love America like I did or would they say "a curse on Columbus" because the New World brought them nothing but trouble and hard work?

Eve Tal was born in the United States, but lives on Kibbutz Hatzor in Israel. Cursing Columbus is her second young adult historical novel and is the sequel to Double Crossing, which is based on her grandfather's emigration story from the Ukraine.

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  • Reviews

    • School Library Journal

      January 1, 2010
      Gr 5-8-In this sequel to "Double Crossing" (Cinco Puntos, 2005), brothers Lemmel and Shloyme, little sister Hannah, and Mama finally join Raizel and their father in America. Raizel, given the name Rose at school, must help them acclimate to their early-20th-century Lower East Side environment. She guides her brothers through their first days of school and her mother in the realities of a less religiously observant Jewish lifestyle. This first year of the family's reunion is difficult. Papa loses his job, and Lemmel's unrecognized learning disability hampers his bar mitzvah preparation. He becomes rebellious, skips school, and runs away to a life of crime on the streets. And Mama, in her Old World ways, refuses to acknowledge her daughter's dream to become a teacher. She expects her to drop out of school at 14, work in a factory, find a hardworking husband, and raise a family. Raizel's effort to juggle work, school, and a budding romance is deftly juxtaposed with Lemmel's precarious low-life existence. His ultimate arrest and trial shame the family, yet his truthful confession, sense of ethical behavior, and redemption bring them all together in an effort to right several wrongs and begin anew. Told in the alternating voices of Raizel and Lemmel, the story offers a realistic and poignant picture of a bygone time."Rita Soltan, Youth Services Consultant, West Bloomfield, MI"

      Copyright 2010 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      October 15, 2009
      Grades 7-10 Not everything in America is wonderful and not everything from the Old Country should be discarded. Told through the alternating narratives of two Jewish immigrant teens, Raizel, 14, and her brother Lemmel, 13, this gripping novel, set in Mahattans Lower East Side in 1908, goes beyond sentimentality about the promised land of America to show a heartbreaking, sometimes brutal, daily struggle. Lemmel cannot read, but he is too ashamed to let his parents know his secret, and he runs away from home, barely surviving on the streets. Raizels dream is to become a teacher, but Mama needs Raizel at home (What is so important about school for a girl anyway?). At school, Raizel wins a prize for an essay honoring Columbus, and Tal never explores the prejudice it contains against native Indians. What works so well here are the vividly detailed descriptions of Yiddish culture; the opportunities in the new country; and the troubles and the riches left behind. A great title to prompt discussion about discrimination against new immigrants, now and then, as well as the valuable diversity newcomers bring.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2009, American Library Association.)

    • The Horn Book

      January 1, 2010
      This sequel to Double Crossing, set in the Lower East Side in the early twentieth century, is told through alternating perspectives of Raizel and her brother, Lemmel. While Raizel is determined to be a teacher, Lemmel turns to a life of petty crime. Although the family's trials and tribulations are familiar territory, Tal captures the flavor of the immigrant experience. Reading list. Glos.

      (Copyright 2010 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

Formats

  • OverDrive Read
  • EPUB ebook

Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:3.6
  • Lexile® Measure:500
  • Interest Level:6-12(MG+)
  • Text Difficulty:0-2

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