Images All in a Kind Family Book Cover

1951 children's book by Sydney Taylor

All-of-a-Kind Family
All-of-a-Kind-Family-Cover.jpg
Author Sydney Taylor
Illustrator Helen John
State U.s.a.
Language English
Genre Children'southward novel
Publisher Follett Publishing Company

Publication date

1951
Media type Print
Pages 149 pp
ISBN 0440400597
Followed by More All-of-a-Kind Family

All-of-a-Kind Family is a 1951 children'south book by Sydney Taylor near a family of five American Jewish girls growing upwards on the Lower East Side of New York City in 1912.[1] It was followed by four sequels.

Background [edit]

All-of-a-Kind Family is based on Sydney Taylor's recollections of her babyhood on Manhattan'due south Lower East Side, where her family settled forth with many other Jewish families after migrating from Eastern Europe by style of Germany.[2] The main characters are named for Taylor's real-life sisters, Ella, Henny, Charlotte, and Gertrude, and the eye sister was given the author's birth name, Sarah.[3]

The book'southward genesis was stories of her childhood that Taylor would tell her daughter, Jo. Taylor wrote:

"I took my daughter Jo down to the one-time neighborhood where Papa, Mama and the 5 lilliputian girls had lived. But the by was dead in that location; it lived only in me. I decided to write it all down for Jo. Perhaps in this way I could re-create for both of us some feeling of that other life."[4]

While Taylor wrote All-of-a-Kind Family for her daughter, by some accounts[3] she had no plans to publish the story. But, the story goes, her husband secretly submitted the manuscript for the Charles W. Follett Award in 1951, and it won, launching Taylor's career and what would become a five-volume series.[2]

The book is noteworthy for its delineation of a joint Jewish American identity, with the characters expressing both pride in their Jewish traditions and American patriotism, following the trajectory of Taylor's own family'south absorption. "Not only are Jewish customs explained honestly and frankly, only Taylor makes them attractive and positive, drawing in her readers, both Jewish and non-Jewish," the scholar June Cummins writes.[5]

Plot [edit]

Ella, Henny, Sarah, Charlotte, and Gertrude are v sisters growing upwardly on the Lower East Side of Manhattan in 1912. The volume follows them through a year of their childhood, equally they deal with mundane chores, observe joy in eating processed in bed and collecting used books from their male parent's junk store, recover from scarlet fever, and celebrate Jewish holidays such every bit Purim and Sukkot as well as the Fourth of July. They also inadvertently help their father'southward friend Charlie solve a mystery from his past and, in the cease, welcome a new family unit member.[1]

Main characters [edit]

  • Ella: The oldest of the five sisters, age 12, 1900. She is based on the writer'southward own eldest sister of the same name.
  • Henrietta "Henny": The second sister, age x, 1902. She is the virtually wild and mischievous one. She is the only 1 whose hair is blonde and curly as opposed to black and straight.
  • Sarah: The middle sister, and the author's avatar. Age eight, 1904, equally she was based on the writer herself. She is the most applied and levelheaded one who values her education.
  • Charlotte: The starting time youngest sister with her caput in the clouds, age 6. She is the about imaginative 1 of the sisters.
  • Gertrude "Gertie": The youngest of the five sisters, age 4, 1908.
  • Mama: The girls' mother, a resourceful homemaker.
  • Papa: The girls' male parent, who runs a junk shop. He has several brothers.
  • Kathy Allen: A librarian at the local library who befriends the girls. She is Charlie Graham's lost sweetheart.
  • Herbert "Charlie" Graham: Papa's good American friend, a junk peddler with a mysterious past whom Ella is secretly infatuated with. He is Kathy Allen's lost sweetheart.

Sequels [edit]

Taylor followed All-of-a-Kind Family unit with iv sequels: More All-of-a-Kind Family, All-of-a-Kind Family unit Uptown, All-of-a-Kind Family Downtown, and Ella of All-of-a-Kind Family.[6] The final novel was published shortly afterward Taylor'southward death in 1978.[4] In 2018 a motion-picture show volume sequel called All-of-a-Kind Family Hanukkah written by Emily Jenkins and illustrated by Paul O. Zelinsky[vii] was named a Kirkus best book of 2018 and won the Sydney Taylor Volume Award for Younger Readers in 2019. [viii]

Awards and legacy [edit]

Taylor received the Charles Westward. Follett Award for All-of-a-Kind Family's contribution to children's literature in 1951.[4] All-of-a-Kind Family unit was also the first recipient of the Jewish Book Quango's National Jewish Book Laurels for children's literature in 1952.[9] The book is considered foundational to the evolution of American Jewish children'southward literature,[10] and the Clan of Jewish Libraries' annual children'due south literature laurels is named the Sydney Taylor Book Award in honor of Taylor's work.[11] The publisher Lizzie Skurnick, who reissued the All-of-a-Kind sequels, describes Taylor's delineation of American Jewish life as "completely atypical. They're the first series about a Jewish family ever, one that'south not only about the family, but near Jewish civilization, New York, the turn of the century, vaudeville, polio, the ascension of engineering."[iii]

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b Taylor, Sydney, 1904-1978. (1951). All-of-a-kind family. New York: Dell. ISBN0-440-40059-7. OCLC 19596819. {{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  2. ^ a b "Sydney Taylor". JWA.org. Jewish Women's Annal. Retrieved 2020-04-28 .
  3. ^ a b c "Sydney Taylor: Bringing All-of-a-Kind Family unit into the World". Flower. 2018-10-30. Retrieved 2020-04-28 .
  4. ^ a b c "Sydney Taylor, 73, Wrote Children'south Books and Won Charles West. Follett Honor". The New York Times. 1978-02-14. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2020-04-28 .
  5. ^ Cummins, June (September 2003). "Condign an 'All-of-a-Kind' American: Sydney Taylor and Strategies of Absorption" (PDF). The Lion and the Unicorn. 27 (3): 324–343. doi:10.1353/uni.2003.0032 – via longwood.edu.
  6. ^ "Sydney Taylor". PenguinRandomhouse.com. Penguin Random Firm. Retrieved 2020-04-28 .
  7. ^ "All-of-a-Kind Family Hanukkah". Penguin Random House. Retrieved 14 June 2021.
  8. ^ "Sydney Taylor Book Awards" (PDF). The Association of Jewish Libraries. Retrieved 14 June 2021.
  9. ^ "Past Winners". jewishbookcouncil.org. Jewish Volume Council. Retrieved 2020-04-28 .
  10. ^ "All-of-a-Kind Family". jewishbookcouncil.org. Jewish Book Council. 1951. Retrieved 2020-04-28 .
  11. ^ "Sydney Taylor Volume Award". jewishlibraries.org. Association of Jewish Libraries. Retrieved 2020-04-28 .

External links [edit]

  • All-of-a-Kind Family at the Jewish Book Council

livingstonloness.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/All-of-a-Kind_Family

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