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Letters from Rifka

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Country
  
United States

Media type
  
Print

OCLC
  
25205387

Originally published
  
15 July 1992

Genre
  
Epistolary novel

ISBN
  
9780805019643

3.9/5
Goodreads

Publication date
  
July 15, 1992

Pages
  
148 pp

LC Class
  
PZ7.H4364 Le 1992

Author
  
Publisher
  
Henry Holt and Company

Letters from Rifka t2gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcQpoh6XoNl2oz5LU4

Characters
  
Rifka's mother, Rifka, Saul, Rifka's father, Nathan

Similar
  
Karen Hesse books, The Holocaust books, Children's literature

Letters From Rifka is a children's historical novel by Karen Hesse, published by Holt in 1992. It features a Jewish family's emigration from Russia in 1919, to Belgium and ultimately to the U.S., from the perspective of daughter Rifka, based on the personal account by Hesse's great-aunt Lucille Avrutin.

Contents

Hesse and Letters won the 2012 Phoenix Award from the Children's Literature Association, recognizing the best children's book published twenty years earlier that did not win a major award. Among contemporary honors it won the 1993 National Jewish Book Award in category Children's Literature.

The protagonist's name, Rifka, is the East European Jewish version of Rebecca (Rivká in Modern Israeli Hebrew).

Plot

During the Russian Civil War of 1919, Rifka and her family must flee Russia because the Russian army are after her brothers. She tells her story in a series of letters to a cousin named Tovah who remains behind in Russia, written in the blank spaces of an edition of Pushkin's poetry. Rifka, her parents, and her brothers, Nathan and Saul, escape Russia, hoping to join the three older sons who have been living in America. Along the way, they face many obstacles such as cruel officials, her mom, dad and older brother all catch typhus. They suffer through hunger, theft, and Rifka gets a skin disease that forces her to stay behind in Belgium while her family travels to America. In Belgium people are kind to Jewish people and she is able to recover from her illness. Once she recovers she can leave Belgium to travel to America to meet her family. She travels to America by large ship where she befriends and develops romantic feelings for Pieter, a sailor. During the voyage a dangerous storms occurs killing Pieter. She arrives to Ellis island where she learns her skin disease has return and she can't enter America yet. While she is detained at Ellis Island, she finds she has a talent for nursing others to health. On Ellis island Rifka meets a new friend named Ilya, but he first does not talk to her nor will he won't eat, so everyone thinks he's a simpleton. Once Rifka becomes better friends with him, she discovers that he is very smart. She helps him understand that his uncle is not cruel and wants him to come to America because he loves Ilya, and Ilya reads from Rifka's Pushkin poetry book. He passes the "Test" and makes it to America. Rifka gets over her ringworm, and gets to America to be with her family.

Reception

Kirkus Reviews called it "an unforgettable picture of immigrant courage, ingenuity, and perseverance." while Publishers Weekly wrote "Hesse's vivacious tale colorfully and convincingly refreshes the immigrant experience."

References

Letters from Rifka Wikipedia


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