
Naomi Howland
Author of Latkes, Latkes, Good to Eat: A Chanukah Story
About the Author
Works by Naomi Howland
Color Claremont 3 copies
The Broken Matzah 1 copy
Associated Works
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Gender
- female
- Education
- School of Visual Arts
- Occupations
- children's author
book Illustrator - Short biography
- Naomi Howland is an American children's book author and illustrator. Raised in Englewood, New Jersey, she was educated at the School of Visual Arts in New York City. Her first book, ABCDrive!, began as an illustration assignment at the Art Center College of Design in Pasadena, California. In addition to her own books, Howland has illustrated a number of picture-books written by other authors.
- Nationality
- USA
- Places of residence
- Englewood, New Jersey, USA
Claremont, California, USA - Associated Place (for map)
- USA
Members
Reviews
I loved reading “The Matzah Man” because it is a vibrant Jewish version of the traditional folktale, “The Gingerbread Man.” This would be a very useful book to include in my future classroom since it is a cultural spinoff of a story most children are familiar with. I especially loved the writing and rhythm included in this story, “Hot from the oven I jumped and ran, So clever and quick, I’m the Matzah Man!” This poetic repetition motivates children to actively join in with the show more reading. Similarly, the plot is recognizable to children and creates a comical suspense every time the Matzah Man escapes another person. I think reading both “The Gingerbread Man” and “The Matzah Man” would be a great opportunity for children to compare and contrast each cultures’ versions. The main idea of this story is to introduce a Jewish adaptation with the preexisting moral: be careful of who you trust. show less
A Jewish spin on the traditional tale of the Gingerbread Man has a little matzah man taunting and running away from everyone who wants to eat him with their Passover feast.
I'm not a fan of the repetitive nature of the ever-lengthening song the matzah man sings. I just want to skip to the comeuppance at the end.
My daughter liked this when she was nearly four, but it didn't get a lot of re-reads.
FOR REFERENCE:
Rated "Indifferent" in our old book database by Rod; rated "Good" by Adelia.
I'm not a fan of the repetitive nature of the ever-lengthening song the matzah man sings. I just want to skip to the comeuppance at the end.
My daughter liked this when she was nearly four, but it didn't get a lot of re-reads.
FOR REFERENCE:
Rated "Indifferent" in our old book database by Rod; rated "Good" by Adelia.
In preparation for the seder, a local baker is making Passover matzah. He uses the last scraps of matzah dough to form a little man and pops him in the oven to bake. When the baker opens the oven door, the crispy Matzah Man jumps out and runs away. Taunting people and animals along the way, the Matzah Man narrowly escapes becoming part of the Passover meal. He outwits them all until he meets young Mendel Fox. The Matzah Man is in for a big surprise when clever Mendel offers to help him hide show more from his pursuers.
The Bottom Line: This humorous and festive tale is a rollicking adaptation of The Gingerbread Boy. This adventure is just plain fun to read with Howland’s use of repetition, rhythm, and rhyme. Additionally, Howland’s cheerful and bright illustrations in gouache and cut-paper collage with colored pencil will appeal to readers of all ages. Check this one out for kids in grades 1 – 3. Includes a “Passover Glossary” at the end.
This review also appears at the Mini Book Bytes Book Review Blog. show less
The Bottom Line: This humorous and festive tale is a rollicking adaptation of The Gingerbread Boy. This adventure is just plain fun to read with Howland’s use of repetition, rhythm, and rhyme. Additionally, Howland’s cheerful and bright illustrations in gouache and cut-paper collage with colored pencil will appeal to readers of all ages. Check this one out for kids in grades 1 – 3. Includes a “Passover Glossary” at the end.
This review also appears at the Mini Book Bytes Book Review Blog. show less
I have mixed feelings over this book. I liked how it was about another culture and it introduced other foods that Jewish people eat on passover in a humor way. There was also a glossary of terms in the back of the book to help introduce other cultures and the meaning behind unfamiliar words. I did not like that the story did not have a point, the matzah man would just run away from everyone saying "hot from the oven I jumped and ran, so clever and quick, I'm the matzah man." Then the boy in show more the story lied to his family about the matzah man being in his home and then everyone ate him and the matzah man died. So there was no plot and there were no well developed characters. The illustration of the matzah man was very detailed and looked like real matzah. The message of this story was that Jewish holidays are spent with family and friends where they enjoy lots of ethnic foods including matzah. show less
Awards
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 9
- Also by
- 1
- Members
- 1,495
- Popularity
- #17,183
- Rating
- 3.4
- Reviews
- 18
- ISBNs
- 25












