The Jewish Chronicle

Screen teens

- BY ANGELA KIVERSTEIN

Emails, texts, diary entries and blog posts combine to tell the story of Gena/Finn by Hannah Moskowitz and Kat Helgeson (Chronicle Books, £11.99). Gena and Finn are (female) fans of the TV programme Up Below — Gena posts fanfic and Finn illustrate­s (sadly we do not see her drawings — graphic s e c t i o n s would have added to the b o l d n a r r a t i v e mix). The pair meet online and, as they become closer, the drama of their own lives overtakes their fiction. The authors are skilful in building up a sense of the fictional TV programme’s plot, continuing behind the scenes — although eventually TV intrudes into the characters’ “real” life, with devastatin­g effect. Ages 15 to adult (some swearing).

It is early 1945 and the Soviet army is closing in on Germany. Salt to the Sea by Ruta Sepetys (Penguin, £7.99) is an unusual wartime escape story, in that it focuses on the journey of non-Jewish refugees from eastern Europe who are hoping to reach an oversubscr­ibed ship and sail out of Stalin’s grasp. The varied group of travellers ranges from medically trained youngster Joana, a Lithuanian with a guilty secret, to “the shoe poet”, an old man with a passionate belief in the link between well-fitting shoes and survival. Sepetys is judicious in her use of historical detail. Age 14 up (distressin­g episodes).

“It was a square world. You had to be square to be there.” Irresistib­le scenesetti­ng lines from

I am Squarehead ( S q u a r e w o r l d , £5.99). But what if you live in this world and you have a round thought? This fable about daring to be different is illustrate­d by Margit Mulder and published in a smallhands-friendly format, with similar appeal to that of the Mr Men books. Also available is the sequel, Hairy Scary’s Bad Day. Age five to nine.

Shabbat is the theme of two brightly illustrate­d board books from Kar-Ben (£4 each). by is a rhyming tale of a family day out in the countrysid­e; Shh… Shh… Shabbat by Linda Elovitz Marshall contrasts a week of noisy city experience­s with the calm of the Sabbath. Under-fives will enjoy Eugenia Golubeva’s bright colours, smiley images and the simple but satisfying structure of the stories. Congratula­tions to David Solomons, whose My Brother is a Superhero (published by Nosy Crow) has won a British Book Industry Award for best children’s book

 ??  ?? Barash One Fine Shabbat Chris
Barash One Fine Shabbat Chris
 ??  ?? Simon Frank’s
Simon Frank’s
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom