If weather’s making both the “big” and little kids restless, fire up your computer and enjoy a story read aloud via Your Jewish Neighborhood, Temple Isaiah’s podcast. Temple Librarian Val Morehouse is the storyteller, hosted by Michele Holtz for YJN.
Tales picked appeal to adults and to children. The library owns each title read, and Val recommends reading the print version as well for the quality of the colorful artwork. To play, a high-speed internet connection, computer with internet browser, sound card, and speakers, are needed. Most computers come so equipped. Below are six satisfying Jewish stories, with internet URL’s to get you listening after just a few mouse clicks. Paste the URL into your browser; hit search, then click the play button when the podcast is found.
The Chanukkah Guest, by Eric A. Kimmel. Holiday House, 1990.
Bad ears and worse eyesight cause Bubbe to invite bear to her party instead of the Rabbi [Chanukkah]. http://libsyn.com/media/yourjewishneighborhood/yjn-19.mp3
Gershon’s Monster, by Eric A. Kimmel. Scholastic Pr., 2000.
His sins threaten the lives of his beloved twin children, until a Jewish man repents his wicked ways [Rosh Hashanah]. http://www.temple-isaiah.org/index.php/isaiah/info/2350
The Hardest Word, by Jacqueline Jules. Kar-Ben, 2001.
When the Ziz bird spoils the children’s synagogue garden, God assigns a quest to teach him a lesson [Yom Kippur]. http://www.temple-isaiah.org/index.php/isaiah/info/746
A Mountain of Blintzes, by Barbara Diamond Goldin. Harcourt, 2001.
Mom and Dad both fail to save enough to buy ingredients for blintzes, but their children engineer a rescue [Shavuot]. http://www.temple-isaiah.org/index.php/isaiah/info/1925
Pearl Moscowitz’s Last Stand, by Arthur Levine. Tambourine Books, 1993.
The Electric Company man comes to remove Ginkgo Street’s last tree, but Pearl and her neighbors cause quite a commotion [Tu b’shevat]. http://www.temple-isaiah.org/index.php/isaiah/info/2948
Raisel’s Riddle, by Erica Silverman. Farrar, 1999.
Orphan Rachel helps the cook in the Rabbi’s kitchen, when she catches the Rabbi’s son’s eye. Rewarded with three wishes for kindness to an old woman, she sets out to win his heart at the Purim ball [Purim]. http://libsyn.com/media/yourjewishneighborhood/yjn-31.mp3
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