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Leslie Kimmelman

Author of Johnny Appleseed

152+ Works 6,685 Members 172 Reviews

About the Author

Series

Works by Leslie Kimmelman

Johnny Appleseed (2010) 955 copies
Olivia and the Haunted Hotel (2010) 319 copies
How Do I Love You? (2005) 288 copies
Hooray! It's Passover! (1996) 261 copies
Belly Breathe (2018) 244 copies
Olivia and the Babies (2010) 188 copies
The Runaway Latkes (2000) 139 copies
Everybody Bonjours! (2008) 132 copies
Everybody Says Shalom (2015) 129 copies
The Very Crowded Sukkah (1745) 104 copies
The Shabbat Puppy (2012) 75 copies
Guess Who: Ocean Friends (2007) 73 copies
Olivia Acts Out (2009) 73 copies
Farm Friends (Guess Who?) (2006) 53 copies
Rhyming Rapunzel (2010) 42 copies
The Three Bully Goats (2011) 37 copies
The Rabbi Slurps Spaghetti (2019) 33 copies
Ben Lost a Tooth (2004) 29 copies
A Dog Named Honey (2004) 29 copies
Star Pictures (2004) 27 copies
Frannie's Fruits (1605) 26 copies
What Is It? (2004) 24 copies
Here Come the Helpers (2018) 24 copies
Write On, Irving Berlin! (2018) 23 copies
Guess Who: Baby Animals (2011) 23 copies
The Three Little Grouches (2008) 21 copies
Big Red Riding Hood (2008) 18 copies
Elmo's World: Sun! (2008) 18 copies
Guess Who: Playtime Pets (2011) 17 copies
Barack Obama (2016) 12 copies
Me and Nana (1990) 12 copies
Elmo's World: Spaceship (2008) 12 copies
My Little Bible ABC's (2014) 11 copies
Mr. Mintz's Blintzes (2022) 11 copies
Elmo's World: Stars! (2008) 9 copies
A Book about Bupkes (2023) 8 copies
Tangrams (iOpeners) (2007) 7 copies
Rosita and the Beanstalk (2008) 5 copies
Off to Market (2014) 2 copies
Olivia et les bébés (2010) 1 copy
To the Stars 1 copy
To Mars 1 copy

Associated Works

The Three Musketeers (Ladybird Children's Classics) (1980) — Adapter, some editions — 90 copies

Tagged

animals (46) apples (159) biography (70) board book (34) celebrations (36) Child Life (24) children (59) children's (74) children's books (24) community helpers (57) counting (49) fall (67) family (57) feelings (30) fiction (75) food (29) France (28) friendship (24) Halloween (59) Hanukkah (157) hardcover (27) history (50) holiday (46) holidays (120) Israel (37) Jewish (94) Jewish holidays (25) Johnny Appleseed (52) Judaism (60) love (33) non-fiction (61) Olivia (24) Passover (145) picture book (208) PJ Library (58) religion (25) Rosh Hashanah (34) Sesame Street (30) Sukkot (41) Yom Kippur (39)

Common Knowledge

Other names
Grodinsky , Leslie
Shepherd, Jodie
Birthdate
1958
Gender
female
Nationality
USA
Places of residence
New York City metro area, New York, USA
Occupations
children's book author
publisher
editor
freelance writer
Short biography
The very first word I learned to read was A-L-L. It was particularly appropriate because from the joyful moment I got my first library card, my goal was to read every single book in the children’s section. Books were magical to me. I still feel that way.

After graduation, I moved to New York City and began my publishing career. I spent many happy years as a children's book editor at various publishing houses. It took me a while to get used to reading on the job -- I was doing exactly what I was supposed to be doing! The more I read on the job, the more I realized I wanted to write my own books.

After a few false starts, my first book, Frannie’s Fruits, was published in 1989.

Eventually, I discovered how to get to Sesame Street. I worked at Sesame Workshop for the next 24 years, first as Senior Editor of Sesame Street Magazine and then as an editor in the publishing department and a writer of special projects. I now write full-time. I live in a small town outside New York City, where my husband and I have brought up two children and two dogs. I still read everything I can get my hands on--and write stories and poems that, I hope, introduce children to the magic of books. [adapted from the website]

Members

Reviews

First sentence: It was Eve's first day in the Garden of Eden. Actually, it was her first day anywhere, since she was newly created. God had made her wonderfully well. Eve was not afraid of anything. She was not afraid of the wild green tangle of the garden. Not afraid of the tall leafy trees soaring up into the sky. Not afraid of the vivid, rainbow-colored flowers growing all around her, their sweet scents perfuming the air.

Eve is the star of the show in Leslie Kimmelman's light-hearted retelling of the creation story. (Note the shift from Adam and Eve to Eve and Adam. Adam perhaps should join Ken in singing "I'm Just Ken." Adam is introduced four pages into the text.)

The main theme seems to be that Eve (and Adam) were created by God and lived fearlessly (well, mostly). Eve finds Adam super cute and adorable but a little lacking in imagination and intelligence. Quote from the text, "Maybe it was because Adam had been first. Eve came second, and, well, practice makes perfect." (To be fair to the author, Eve does admit she is NOT perfect two seconds after saying that she was perfect.)

About a third of the way through the story, the pair are startled and frightened by rain, thunder, and lightning. This is the first time they've experienced fear but they turn to faith in God that all will be well...again. (I suppose theologians might have differing opinions on IF rain occurred before the Flood or not. I suppose this isn't the most critical issue one could have in the evangelical faith. [Note: when I say evangelical I do NOT mean anything related to politics.])

Soon one fright leads to another. Turns out ADAM is afraid of the dark. Good thing Eve isn't scared of the dark and can help calm him down. But as the darkness becomes truly darkness, even Eve becomes worried. Though not as bad as shivering Adam. The stars eventually make their appearance and the two nestle up comfy-cozy together. (The whole book presents Eve and Adam without clothes. So this nestling picture seems an odd choice. It is in some ways sweet. But in other ways, a little daring for a children's book.)

The book ends with Eve (and Adam) declaring everything GOOD. Here is where I go from mildly perturbed to indignant. God has been an "extra" at best in this little play of creation. Definitely not front and center. The book itself has been very cutesy and light-hearted. In a way. Perhaps not a harmless way. Definitely a more pointed way. A way that makes Adam look weak, pathetic, a sidekick to Eve, her companion sure enough but not her equal. But I think the "slap in the face," if you will is when the author takes Scripture--God's declaration of creation's goodness [see Genesis 1:1-31]--and ends her story this way, "Eve and Adam saw that it was good." God barely registers as a footnote in the text. In Genesis 1 and 2, God is on the move--he is ACTIVELY creating, speaking, working, declaring. Make no mistake, any [intelligent] reading of the text reveals that God is front and center, the "main character" if you will, the whole point. This picture book pushes out the Creator and makes CREATION--specifically Eve--the focal point.

As the title suggests, the picture book is "the first day, first night, second morning." The scene fades before Genesis 3.

I think I could be unimpressed but not particularly disgruntled if the picture book did not end with the phrase, "And Eve and Adam saw that it was good." I think it isn't so much the sentiment behind the literal words. I am 99.9% sure that Adam and Eve did look at God's creation and saw goodness. It is the parroting of the biblical narrative and attributing God's declaration as originating from Eve that is unsettling.

The book is in the difficult position. On the one hand, it isn't theologically or biblically sound enough for [some] Christians to want to share with little ones. And Adam and Eve narratives abound in Bible storybooks. This one isn't remarkable enough to be better than those. Will every Christian see this one as twisting Scripture? Maybe. Maybe not. Probably not. On the other hand, the subject matter itself--Adam, Eve, Garden of Eden, God--makes it a difficult sell to a general audience, a secular audience that may not want any hint of religion. For those wanting an Eve that more closely resembles the Barbie character from 2023's Barbie movie instead of the book of Genesis from the very Word of God, this one may be a good fit.

Now, I will say--and I doubt anyone is still reading--that I did not dislike the artwork. I think the story is meant to be tongue-in-cheek, playful, light-hearted, fun and silly. I don't think the author truly has made a decision to play around with the truth of Scripture. It may come off as irreverent to me, but I don't assume that that was authorial intent.
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Flagged
blbooks | Mar 1, 2024 |
Joyful, fascinating, and filled with "extras" (e.g. "The youngest racer to finish the marathon was Wesley Paul, age eight, who finished in just over three hours in 1977. Now you must be at least eighteen years old to run"). The first full page spread is an illustrated map of the route through all five boroughs; back matter includes an author's note and selected sources. Really fun and informative, and sprinkled with amusing visual details (like the sign someone holds up saying "You are NOT almost there!" in Brooklyn). Finishing is winning!

See also: Her Fearless Run; Girl Running
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½
 
Flagged
JennyArch | Feb 12, 2024 |
"This cheery book features joy, courtesy, and care for others in a fun and lighthearted way".
 
Flagged
HandelmanLibraryTINR | Jan 29, 2024 |
This was a cute story about a boy, his grandfather, and a dog. It features some Jewish vocabulary throughout with definitions in the beginning. It was a sweet representation of involving pets in important times in life, and showed a very sweet representation of grandparent-grandchild relationships.
 
Flagged
mmulvany22 | 1 other review | Jan 18, 2024 |

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Statistics

Works
152
Also by
1
Members
6,685
Popularity
#3,659
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
172
ISBNs
460
Languages
5

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