The only daughter A novel

Abraham B. Yehoshua, 1936-2022

Book - 2023

"Rachele Luzzato is twelve years old when she learns her father is gravely ill. While her family plans for her upcoming Bat-Mitzvah, Rachele finds herself cast as the Madonna in her school's Christmas play. Caught between spiritual poles, struggling to cope with her father's mortality, Rachele feels as if the threads of her everyday life are unravelling. A diverse circle of adults are there to guide young Rachele as she faces the difficult passing of childhood, including her charismatic Jewish grandfather, her maternal Catholic grandparents, and even an old teacher who believes the young girl might find solace in a nineteenth-century novel. These spiritual tributaries ultimately converge in Rachele's imagination, creatin...g a fantasy that transcends the microcosm of her daily life with one simple hope: an end to the loneliness felt by an only daughter. A. B. Yehoshua paints a warm and subtle portrait of a young girl at the cusp of her journey into adulthood."--

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Subjects
Genres
Novels
Religious fiction
Domestic fiction
Bildungsromans
Published
New York, NY : HarperVia, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers 2023.
Language
English
Hebrew
Main Author
Abraham B. Yehoshua, 1936-2022 (author)
Other Authors
Stuart Schoffman (translator)
Edition
First HarperVia edition
Item Description
Translation of: Bat ha-yeḥidah.
"Originally published as Habat Hayechida in Israel in 2021 by Hakibbuz Hameuchad."--Title page verso.
Physical Description
191 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9780358670445
9780063305533
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

With both Christmas and her bat mitzvah approaching, a 12-year-old Italian girl is awakened to the contradictions and complications of her mixed identity. An only child born into a family of Jewish lawyers (her Catholic-raised mother switched to Judaism), Rachele Luzzatto attends a church school in northern Italy while regularly taking Hebrew lessons from a rabbi imported from Israel for that purpose by her parents. Trouble brews when this bright and inquisitive girl is happily assigned the part of the Mother of God in a seasonal school play. While her Catholic grandfather encourages her to embrace her Roman Catholic origins, her father (who is being treated for a brain tumor) rants at the school's insensitivity: "You already destroyed enough of us Jews, so don't try to steal one of the few left over." The theme of double identities runs through this short novel. During the war, Rachele's Jewish grandfather disguised himself as a priest. At a masquerade party in Venice during Carnival, Rachele wears a yeshiva boy mask, but she's concerned that with the mask's blond sidelocks, wearing one of her own dresses would show "frivolous contempt for religion and identity." As it is, her Catholic grandfather is fuming about the inclusion of the Aleinu prayer (controversial for its dismissal of non-Jewish gods) in Rachele's bat mitzvah ceremony. Inspired by a children's story, she decides to replace it "with something gentler and more human." A departure in not being set in Israel, the late Yehoshua's penultimate work (another novella awaits its English translation) is one of his more understated books. Even in depicting antisemitism, he finds humor in the strained relations between Jews and gentiles. You'll read it here first: "Skiing by Jews on Christmas is a tribute to the birth of a divine child in the Holy Land." A wise, masterfully understated work by one of Israel's towering literary figures. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.