The Matzah Man A Passover Story

by Naomi Howland

Paperback, 2004

Status

Available

Call number

H PS E HOW

Publication

Scholastic (2004), 32 pages

Description

Just before the Passover seder, a man baked from scraps of matzo dough escapes from the oven and eludes a number of pursuers until he meets clever Mendel Fox.

Library's rating

½

Barcode

6524

Language

User reviews

LibraryThing member karinaw
Personal Response:
This is a very fun book. My daughter, who is not familiar with the gingerbread man story, loved it and has asked for it quite a few times over the last month. The words on each page are an appropriate length for a three year old. The pictures cover the whole two page spread and
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are very fun to examine. The author provides a glossary of terms used in the book that might be unfamiliar to the reader. I picked this book as I looked for picture books on holidays for different cultures.

Curricular:
How else could you retell a well known story? Can you retell a story so has elements from your own life?
Good writing assignment to create your own story.
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LibraryThing member hgold
I probably would not use this book as an educational material about holidays, because I feel like it does not really examine what is Passover, but it may be good for the repeating parts and the fact that it is based on a story that most kids already know.
LibraryThing member karenamorg
Naomi Howland’s adaptation of The Gingerbread Man features a baker creating a Matzah Man with leftover Passover matzah dough. The book has all the familiar elements found in most versions of the cumulative tale, with the refrain changed to “Hot from the oven I jumped and ran. So clever and
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quick, I’m the Matzah Man!” The chasers in this story are a group of Jewish townspeople who all end up at a young boy’s house for a Passover sedar. Coincidentally, this is the Matzah Man’s last stop, as the boy offers to hide him—in the matzah cover on the sedar table. This is a very competent variation, with appropriate Passover elements included in the story (gefilte fish, matzah ball soup and brisket). The text is amusing and the gouache illustrations have a folksy charm. The sedar table incorporates all the holiday foods and accessories. It is unclear why a goat and hen, which were part of the chase, are eating alongside the dinner guests. There is a Passover glossary following the story. Target audience is K-3.

Howland, N. (2002). The matzah man: A Passover story. New York: Clarion Books.
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LibraryThing member Ebutzn1
I loved reading “The Matzah Man” because it is a vibrant Jewish version of the traditional folktale, “The Gingerbread Man.” This would be a very useful book to include in my future classroom since it is a cultural spinoff of a story most children are familiar with. I especially loved the
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writing and rhythm included in this story, “Hot from the oven I jumped and ran, So clever and quick, I’m the Matzah Man!” This poetic repetition motivates children to actively join in with the reading. Similarly, the plot is recognizable to children and creates a comical suspense every time the Matzah Man escapes another person. I think reading both “The Gingerbread Man” and “The Matzah Man” would be a great opportunity for children to compare and contrast each cultures’ versions. The main idea of this story is to introduce a Jewish adaptation with the preexisting moral: be careful of who you trust.
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LibraryThing member amyadams19
I have mixed feelings over this book. I liked how it was about another culture and it introduced other foods that Jewish people eat on passover in a humor way. There was also a glossary of terms in the back of the book to help introduce other cultures and the meaning behind unfamiliar words. I did
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not like that the story did not have a point, the matzah man would just run away from everyone saying "hot from the oven I jumped and ran, so clever and quick, I'm the matzah man." Then the boy in the story lied to his family about the matzah man being in his home and then everyone ate him and the matzah man died. So there was no plot and there were no well developed characters. The illustration of the matzah man was very detailed and looked like real matzah. The message of this story was that Jewish holidays are spent with family and friends where they enjoy lots of ethnic foods including matzah.
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ISBN

0439636280 / 9780439636285

Other editions

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