First Fast

by Barbara Cohen

Hardcover, 1998

Status

Available

Call number

H HH J F COH

Publication

Urj Pr (1998), Hardcover

Description

Award-winning author Barbara Cohen tells the story of a wager between two boys that leads one boy to a deeper understanding of Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement.

Barcode

3205

Awards

Sydney Taylor Book Award (Mass Import -- Pending Differentiation)

Language

User reviews

LibraryThing member break
Do you remember the first time you fasted on Yom Kippur. Was it around the year you had your bar/bat-mitzvah. It sure was not for Harry and his little sister in Barbara Cohen's First fast. Harry, who was ten at the time of the story, wagered with an older boy that he can go fasting all day. He did
Show More
it because he wanted finally to play with the bigger boys; he was tired with playing with girls. Or as he corrected himself, he was tired playing girls' games with them. The wager turned serious and he managed to keep his promise.

What he and his sister, who is telling the story, did not expect was getting a spiritual experience. The books goes on describing the whole day, picking words from prayer book that was suddenly filled with meanings for them. They realized that fasting is easier if they pay attention to the service and try to follow it. It is a great preparation and encouragement for children of the same age to try to participate in Yom Kippur any way they can, written in a simply and eloquent style. I particularly liked the Al Chet segments included, because once can reflect on those even at such a young age.
Show Less
LibraryThing member AbigailAdams26
Leah and Harry Katz, the two Jewish siblings from Brooklyn who featured in author Barbara Cohen's Passover classic, The Carp in the Bathtub, return in this poignant short story about Yom Kippur. Tired of playing girls' games with his older sister and her friend Gertie, Harry makes a bet with Bernie
Show More
Goldman, an older boy who lives in their apartment building: if he can fast the entire day of Yom Kippur, he can join the older boys in their games of stickball. Although initially begun because of this bet, Harry's first fast - and Leah's as well - ends up becoming far more meaningful, and they appreciate the beauty and purpose of the Yom Kippur services more than they ever had before...

I wasn't aware, when picking up First Fast, that it was the second book about these characters, or I would have read The Carp in the Bathtub first. That said, this was such an engaging story that I will definitely be tracking down its predecessor! Well told, with poignant moments that stand out, this is a perceptive story about the relations among children - between siblings, friends and neighbors - and it is also a story about the deeper spiritual meaning behind religious rituals. Many of us, I would imagine, attend church or temple on 'autopilot' sometimes, doing so because it is the custom, whether in our family or in our larger community. Cohen's story is a reminder that there is a deeper experience waiting for us in these observances, if we are open to it. As someone who has experienced those moments of epiphany, and not exclusively in church, someone who has felt that moment when the world both falls away and comes closer, when suddenly everything in creation seems related, and one feels like a small part of a vast whole, I was moved by the moment when Leah, who is the narrator of this tale, has a similar moment of connection, at the end of the services. It takes a writer of skill to capture such a delicate but powerful moment!

I loved pretty much everything about this short story, from the writing itself to the storytelling, from the depiction of those deeper currents of religious experience to the way in which the children of different faiths interact, in their street play. I realized, when finishing the book, that although I have enjoyed every book I have picked up by Cohen, from her Thanksgiving classic, Molly's Pilgrim, to her novelized retelling of the classic Iraqi folktale, Seven Daughters and Seven Sons, I haven't read that much of her. I certainly intend to rectify that soon! Recommended to anyone looking for children's stories about Yom Kippur. Although this one has artwork, it is more of an illustrated short story, than a picture-book, so I'd recommend it to slightly older children, perhaps age seven through nine?
Show Less

ISBN

0807403547 / 9780807403549

Other editions

First Fast by Barbara Cohen (Paper Book)
Page: 0.2297 seconds