The Light Keeper
If the flick of a switch can bring light, what other miracles might be possible?
Shmuel is eager to help support his poor family, but no one in his shtetl is interested in hiring a ten-year-old boy. One day, the village installs new electric lamps, bringing light to their square and dazzling away the dark. Until a lamp breaks during a storm—and Shmuel is the only one who can fix it. Will Shmuel be able to conquer his fear of heights and bring light back to his town?
A gentle tale of bravery, empowerment and community, and the thrill of transformation.
Praise & Recognition
"This inspiring story, based on an incident in the family history of co-author Sheila Baslaw, offers a unique view of a small, Jewish, East European town—a shtetl. Though the book draws on the typical motifs of poverty and hard work, it also offers a telling glimpse of modernity, thereby avoiding a portrait of the shtetl as a static place bound only by tradition...Priestley's gentle illustrations evoke both the traditional shtetl lifestyle and the wonders of electric light. A luminous tale!"
Booklist"Baslaw’s storytelling draws from a rich wellspring of life experience, including her 35-year-long career in social work and her father’s tales of life as a Jewish child in early 1900s Russia.... The Light Keeper is a huge accomplishment."
Ottawa Life MagazineDetails
Publication Date: October 1, 2024
Reading Age: 6 - 8
Product Format: Hardback
Pages: 32
ISBN: 978-1-77260-388-0
Weight: 200
About the Author
Karen Levine
Karen Levine was a prizewinning producer with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) Radio. Karen has won awards for her radio work, including two Peabody Awards - the Oscars of radio. She originally produced her multiple award winning children's book, Hana’s Suitcase, as a radio documentary before making it into a book. Though she travels widely to talk about the book, she makes her home in Toronto with her partner.
About the Author
Sheila Baslaw
Sheila Baslaw began writing children’s stories after a career in social work. Intrigued by the stories her parents told about growing up in a shtetl, she based Shmuel on her father's life as a Jewish child in Russia in the early 1900s. Sheila, now in her 90s, lives in Ottawa and enjoys walking with friends and belongs to study, writing, and poetry groups.
About the Illustrator
Alice Priestley
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