by Tami Shem-Tov (Author) Avi Ofer (Illustrator)
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Uri is bored hanging out in his parents' Tel Aviv delicatessen, so he follows his grandmother on what he thinks is an idle stroll. Grandma has a purpose in mind; she just can't tell Uri, because she speaks only German. The pair becomes part of an exuberant, ever-growing procession through the city, led by a group of people "with funny shaped cases"; when they arrive at an auditorium, Uri realizes that Grandma has brought him to an important concert. "The notes enter my ears, and go straight to my heart," says Uri, as Grandma cries "tears of happiness." This lightly fictionalized tale has a wonderful, true backstory: in December 1936, a group of musicians, all Jewish refugees from Nazi Germany, gave the first performance of what became the Israeli Philharmonic Orchestra. Ofer's fluid watercolor-and-ink cartooning is celebratory and cinematic as the crowd makes its way through the busy metropolis. But Shem-Tov and Sandbank's wordy text spends too much time ineffectively building suspense and not enough on giving readers any of the dramatic and poignant context; it's not until the afterword that the event's full significance is revealed. Ages 4-9. (Jan.)
Copyright 2017 Publishers Weekly, LLC Used with permission."Brown-capped construction workers eating ryebread sandwiches; seltzer stands in the street, Hebrew posters in faintly familiar (but strangely undeveloped) streets...it is 1936 and Uri sits, bored, in his parents' deli
in Tel Aviv, unaware he is soon to attend the first performance of the future Israel Philharmonic Orchestra, escorted by his German-speaking grandma. A Concert in the Sand, by Tami Shem-Tov and Rachella
Sandbank (Kar-Ben, £6.50) is textheavy for a picture book, so would suit a five- to seven-year-old, while Avi Ofer's detailed crowd scenes are almost a historical Where's Wally?"—The Jewish Chronicle (UK)