PICTURE BOOKS
Cohen, Tziporah

Afikomen

(1) K-3 Illustrated by Yaara Eshet. Cohen's inventive picture book uses graphic-novel conventions and is wordless but for the front and back matter and Hebrew and Aramaic text incorporated into the illustrations. It opens with a definition: the afikomen is a piece of matzo broken off early in the Passover Seder to be eaten at the end of the meal. The varied traditions associated with the afikomen (hiding it, stealing it, play-acting with it) are detailed in an appended author's note, but first comes an adventure that leans into the playfulness of this child-friendly part of the Seder. Eshet's appropriately springtime-hued ink and watercolor panels provide clues (including text in the open Haggadah in front of each guest) indicating where in the proceedings we are. The matzo is split, and as the family members launch into telling the Passover story, their dog hides the afikomen under the table. Three children follow...and find themselves in biblical Egypt among the enslaved Jews and playing a role in aiding baby Moses after his mother and sister place him in a basket on the Nile to save his life. All ends well for baby and travelers in a generally lighthearted tale, but one that nods at the more serious history behind the holiday and at the concept of reliving the Jewish enslavement on Passover.

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