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It Rained Warm Bread by Gloria Moskowitz-Sweet

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It Rained Warm Bread

Moishe Moskowitz's Story of Surviving the Holocaust

Gloria Moskowitz-Sweet

Square Fish · Print & ebook · March 2, 2021

Reading lane: Holocaust Stories

A powerful middle grade novel-in-verse about one boy’s experience surviving the Holocaust.

At a Glance

Who It's For

Good for readers who enjoy Holocaust StoriesGood for readers interested in middleGood for fans of Historical Fiction

Book Details

Authors
Gloria Moskowitz-Sweet
Publisher
Square Fish
Published
March 2, 2021
Format
Print & ebook
Theme
Holocaust Stories · Holocaust for Kids
Reading lane
Holocaust Stories

Affinity

Publisher Categories

  • Holocaust Stories

  • Jewish Religious Stories

  • Stories in Verse

About This Book

A powerful middle grade novel-in-verse about one boy’s experience surviving the Holocaust. Moishe Moskowitz was thirteen when the Nazis invaded Poland and his family learned the language of fear. The wolves loomed at every corner, yet Moishe still held on to the blessings of his mother’s blueberry pierogis, of celebrating the Sabbath as a family, of a loyal friend. But each day the darkness weighed more heavily on Moishe as his family was broken, uprooted, and scattered acro...

Read full description

A powerful middle grade novel-in-verse about one boy’s experience surviving the Holocaust. Moishe Moskowitz was thirteen when the Nazis invaded Poland and his family learned the language of fear. The wolves loomed at every corner, yet Moishe still held on to the blessings of his mother’s blueberry pierogis, of celebrating the Sabbath as a family, of a loyal friend. But each day the darkness weighed more heavily on Moishe as his family was broken, uprooted, and scattered across labor and concentration camps. Just as his last hopes began to dim, a simple act of kindness redeemed his faith that goodness could survive the trials of war: That was the day it rained warm bread. Gloria Moskowitz-Sweet relates her father’s triumphant Holocaust story through the words of award-winning poet Hope Anita Smith. Deftly articulated and beautifully illustrated by Lea Lyon, this is an essential addition to the ever-important collection of Holocaust testimonies. Christy Ottaviano Books

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