What makes us
Record details
- ISBN: 0763697508
- ISBN: 9780763697501
-
Physical Description:
342 pages ; 22 cm.
print - Edition: First edition.
- Publisher: Somerville, Massachusetts : Candlewick Press, 2019.
Content descriptions
Summary, etc.: | "Eran Sharon knows nothing of his father except that he left when Eran was a baby. Now a senior in high school and living with his protective but tight-lipped mother, Eran is a passionate young man deeply interested in social justice and equality. When he learns that the Houston police have launched a program to increase traffic stops, Eran organizes a peaceful protest. But a heated moment at the protest goes viral, and a reporter connects the Sharon family to a tragedy fifteen years earlier -- and asks if Eran is anything like his father, a supposed terrorist. Soon enough, Eran is wondering the same thing, especially when the people he's gone to school and temple with for years start to look at him differently. Timely, powerful, and full of nuance, Rafi Mittlefehldt's sophomore novel confronts the prejudices, fears, and strengths of family and community, striking right to the heart of what makes us who we are."--Amazon. |
Search for related items by subject
Genre: | Fiction. |
Available copies
- 3 of 3 copies available at Bibliomation.
Holds
- 0 current holds with 3 total copies.
Other Formats and Editions
Location | Call Number / Copy Notes | Barcode | Shelving Location | Status | Due Date |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Howard Whittemore Library - Naugatuck | YA FIC MITTLEFEHLDT, RAFI (Text) | 34027146557247 | Young Adult New Fiction | Available | - |
North Branch - Bridgeport | YA MITTLEFEHLDT (Text) | 34000147846307 | Young Adult Fiction | Available | - |
Silas Bronson Library - Waterbury | YA FIC MITTLEFEHLDT, R (Text) | 34005146347868 | Young Adult Fiction | Available | - |
Kirkus Review
What Makes Us
Kirkus Reviews
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
A crowded sophomore effort tackles nature and nurture, family secrets, friendship, the place of violence in protest, terrorism and patriotism, Judaism and Zionism, and all the things that make a person.Racially indeterminate 17-year-old Eran knows he gets his (sometimes uncontrolled) anger from his Israeli mother. He is sure his unknown father could have provided the cureuntil he learns his Algerian Israeli father was a terrorist who bombed an Israeli Day parade before being fatally shot himself. In first-person, present-tense, Eran deals with the fallout when he gets involved in a social justice protest, his father's past becomes news, and people in their suburban Texas town suspect he and his mother are terrorists, agitating to "SEND THEM BACK!" Intercut is the third-person, present-tense story of Eran's new friend Jade, who is black and Baptist. Parallels between the two are made painfully obvious: Eran notes "no one ever talks about sunrise"; hundreds of pages later, Jade thinks the same about sunsets. Jade's family also harbors secrets, and she too is deeply affected by events she doesn't recall. With lyrical prose bordering on overdone ("Many girls are drawn to the melody, she knows, but melodies bore Jade") and a plot that stalls when the narrative moves to Jade, this is a book that wants to be many things and falls into an awkward space between quiet and contemplative and boldly topical, doing justice to neither.Provocative but uneven. (Fiction. 13-18) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
School Library Journal Review
What Makes Us
School Library Journal
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Gr 9 Up--It's a toss-up whether this book focuses on single mother Devorah or on her teenaged son Avi, and that's a compliment. Entangled by their love for each other, these two struggle to come to terms with the past that Devorah has tried to protect Avi from with her silence: he doesn't know that his father killed himself and three others with a bomb. "This is not our fight," Devorah told the press; Avi was two at the time. She changed her name to Eema and Avi's to Eran, moved from New York to Houston, and kept her secret as her son grew. Readers meet Eran in high school. He mythologizes his father as the absent parent and blames Eema, the one who stayed, for the anger he cannot always manage, even as he admires her self-control. In his rage Eran resembles his father, but only Eema knows this. After Eran and his friends organize a protest against gun violence and a negative encounter goes viral, an investigative journalist uncovers what his father did. As mother and son reckon with the truth and their little family of two hangs in the balance, a local synagogue offers refuge and a sense of belonging. This coming-of-age story has heft--and much relevance. VERDICT Strong medicine for readers interested in how society accepts or rejects those who are different. An excellent choice for mature audiences.--Georgia Christgau, Middle College High School, Long Island City, NY