Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
A poor man who lives with his family in a very crowded house complains about his lot, until the rabbi, to whom he has gone for advice, tells him to bring in the farm animals as well, and he realizes how lucky he really is. PW declared, ``Zemach's colorful and lusty paintings are hilariously illustrative of the absurd doings.'' (3-up) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review
Remember the ""poor unfortunate man"" who feels crowded with his mother, wife, and six children in a little one-room hut--until the Rabbi instructs him to bring his chickens, goat, and cow inside as well? Marilyn Hirsch did a picture book of the same tale in 1974, with less strength but more variation from page to page; Zemach's scenes--of cumulative chaos indoors, brown shacks from the outside, and the poor man's treks to and from the Rabbi--don't really overcome the story's essentially repetitive staging. But her familiar frowzy figures take on a sturdier cloddishness here, which gives all the squabbling kids, spilt soup, and flying feathers a becoming, down-to-earth vigor. The more you look at Zemach's pages the more commotion there is to notice. And it's a good story, worth repeating. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.