Lilith's Ark: Teenage Tales of Biblical Women | TheBookSeekers

Lilith's Ark: Teenage Tales of Biblical Women


No. of pages 120

Reviews
Great for age 12-18 years

Not long after the world was created, Lilith, the first woman, was expelled from the Garden of Eden. She built an ark, a magic box, in which future biblical women could hide their most prized possessions. And so, Lilith's Ark became a place for women to share their own experiences of adolescence with future generations of girls...

The women of Torah grew up at a time when gender roles were rigidly defined and girls were considered women at an early age. Still, the Torah hints that young biblical women faced challenges similar to those that teenagers encounter today: first loves, burgeoning identities, developing sexualities, and blossoming spirituality. Building on textual sources, Deborah Bodin Cohen has created a collection of midrashim about the teen years of 10 women in Genesis that will resonate with 21st-century readers.

Lilith's Ark melds text, biblical commentaries, and historic details about the ancient world with the experiences of modern girls and women and the author's own imagination. A discussion guide for each story enriches the reading experience. This is a book that will speak across time to the anxieties and aspirations of today's growing girls.

 

This book was recognised in the Family category by the National Jewish Book Award. It was recognised in the Teen category by the Sydney Taylor Book Award.

There are 120 pages in this book. This book was published 2006 by Jewish Publication Society .

Rabbi Deborah Cohen was ordained in 1997 from Hebrew Union College- Jewish Institute of Religion. She is the rabbi for Lifelong Education at Temple Emanuel in Cherry Hill, New Jersey. Her first children's book, The Seventh Day, was recently published.

This book has been nominated for the following awards:

Sydney Taylor Book Award
This book was recognised in the Teen category by the Sydney Taylor Book Award.

National Jewish Book Award
This book was recognised in the Family category by the National Jewish Book Award.

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