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Cara Segal was stayed over her best friend, Marlee
Rosen's, house, but when they both went down for breakfast, Cara got a terrible
surprise. Her father, David Segal, had called Mrs. Rosen saying that he needed
Cara to go to the hospital right a way. Cara was shocked and worried, especially
when Mrs. Rosen told her a fire broke out at her house during the night and her
father needed her. However, Mrs. Rosen refused to tell Cara about her mom,
Julia, and her eight year old sister, Janie. Cara knew something had happened to
them, and she wondered why God hadn't been there to help. Both the Segal and the
Rosen family were Jewish and they strongly believed that God controlled and
watched over everyone on Earth. So, why hadn't he been there for Cara's family?
When Cara arrived at the hospital, she saw her dad. He
looked old, just like his father. He had been crying, his hair started turning
gray, there were random wrinkles popping up on his face from worry, and worst of
all he smelled of smoke. At first Cara did not recognize him, but when he looked
away from the firefighters she knew it was him. She ran to him and they
embraced; they both began to and right then Cara knew her little sister and
mother were gone, forever.
The
weeks past by and Cara's father wasn't the same without his Janie. Janie had
always been like her father, she even resembled him in a couple different ways.
On the other hand, Cara had always been like her mother. They had baked
together, and her mother had taught her almost everything she knew outside of
school. Now that she was gone Cara was lost, and wanted to stay behind a magic
wall that made her invisible forever, she would not come out from behind it, and
she refused to eat. The first day she ate was the day of her mother and sister's
funeral. Friends and family came over and tried to comfort Cara and her father
but Cara did not want to be comforted, she wanted her sister and her mother
back. Then Cara started to wonder, how did my dad survive, but my sister and
mother die?
Cara moped around, and her father eventually rented an
apartment for he and Cara to live in; he had saved a few items from their house
that had not burnt, but he would not go through the boxes with Cara. Cara became
frustrated, she needed her dad, but her dad started living, to Cara, what seemed
like a ghost. To get rid of her sorrow, she would go over Marlee's house, but
Marlee was getting tired of Cara's moping. On the first night of Shabbat that
Cara had been to since the tragedy, Cara and Marlee got into a fight. They
weren't friends, at least then. Cara kept getting calls for Julia's Kitchen and
she finally decided to do something about it, she was going to bring back
Julia's Kitchen. Her mother had started her own business known as Julia's
Kitchen and she would bake cookies and cakes and sell them. Cara kept getting
orders, and she kept taking them, but she never told her dad. She was not
sure how her dad would react. Eventually Cara
I
really enjoyed this book because it was full of different plots that I did
not think would happen. I also have a few friends who are Jewish and when
holidays come up they talk about them, but I don't
understand what they are talking about. There is a glossary in the back of
the book that give the definitions to all of the Jewish words in the book. I
would recommend this book for middle school students. ~
Ashley Aldan,
grade
7, Boardman Center Middle School |