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Books with title The Patchwork Torah

  • The Patchwork Torah

    Allison Maile Ofanansky, Book Buddy Digital Media, Lerner Publishing Group

    Audiobook (Lerner Publishing Group, April 24, 2017)
    As a child, David watches his grandfather, a Torah scribe or sofer, finish a Torah scroll for the synagogue. "A Torah is not something to be thrown away," his Grandfather explains. David's grandfather carefully stores the old Torah his new one has replaced in his cabinet, hoping to one day repair the letters so the Torah can be used again. David grows up and becomes a sofer just like his grandfather. Through the years, people bring him damaged Torahs they have saved from danger and disaster - one damaged by Nazi soldiers during World War II, one damaged in a fire in a synagogue, and one in flooding during Hurricane Katrina. David stores each of these precious Torahs in his cabinet, until his granddaughter Leah gives him the idea to make a recycled Torah from the salvaged Torah scrolls.
  • The Patchwork Torah

    Allison Maile Ofanansky, Elsa Oriol

    Paperback (Kar-Ben Publishing ®, Jan. 1, 2014)
    As a child, David watches his grandfather, a Torah scribe or sofer, finish a Torah scroll for the synagogue. "A Torah is not something to be thrown away," his Grandfather explains. David's grandfather carefully stores the old Torah his new one has replaced in his cabinet, hoping to one day repair the letters so the Torah can be used again. David grows up and becomes a sofer just like his grandfather. Through the years, people bring him damaged Torahs they have saved from danger and disaster - one damaged by Nazi soldiers during World War II, one damaged in a fire in a synagogue, and one in flooding during Hurricane Katrina. David stores each of these precious Torahs in his cabinet, until his granddaughter Leah gives him the idea to make a recycled Torah from the salvaged Torah scrolls.
    N
  • The Patchwork Torah

    Allison Maile Ofanansky, Elsa Oriol

    eBook (Kar-Ben Publishing ®, Jan. 1, 2014)
    As a child, David watches his grandfather, a Torah scribe or sofer, finish a Torah scroll for the synagogue. "A Torah is not something to be thrown away," his Grandfather explains. David's grandfather carefully stores the old Torah his new one has replaced in his cabinet, hoping to one day repair the letters so the Torah can be used again. David grows up and becomes a sofer just like his grandfather. Through the years, people bring him damaged Torahs they have saved from danger and disaster - one damaged by Nazi soldiers during World War II, one damaged in a fire in a synagogue, and one in flooding during Hurricane Katrina. David stores each of these precious Torahs in his cabinet, until his granddaughter Leah gives him the idea to make a recycled Torah from the salvaged Torah scrolls.
  • The Patchwork Quilt

    Valerie Flournoy, Jerry Pinkney

    Hardcover (Dial Books, March 29, 1985)
    Twenty years ago Valerie Flournoy and Jerry Pinkney created a warmhearted intergenerational story that became an award-winning perennial. Since then children from all sorts of family situations and configurations continue to be drawn to its portrait of those bonds that create the fabric of family life.
    M
  • The Patchwork Quilt

    Valerie Flournoy

    Paperback (Scholastic, Aug. 16, 1996)
    Twenty years ago Valerie Flournoy and Jerry Pinkney created a warmhearted intergenerational story that became an award-winning perennial. Since then children from all sorts of family situations and configurations continue to be drawn to its portrait of those bonds that create the fabric of family life.
    O
  • The Patchwork Bike

    Maxine Beneba Clarke, Van Thanh Rudd

    Hardcover (Candlewick, Sept. 11, 2018)
    It has a bent bucket seat, bashed tin-can handlebars, and wood-cut wheels — and riding the patchwork bike that you and your crazy brothers made is the best fun in the whole village.When you live in a village at the edge of the no-go desert, you need to make your own fun. That's when you and your brothers get inventive and build a bike from scratch, using everyday items like an old milk pot (maybe Mum is still using it, maybe not) and a used flour sack. You can even make a license plate from bark if you want. The end result is a spectacular bike, perfect for whooping and laughing as you bumpetty bump over sand hills, past your fed-up mum and right through your mud-for-walls home. A joyous story by multi-award-winning author Maxine Beneba Clarke, beautifully illustrated by street artist Van Thanh Rudd.
    M
  • The Patchwork Quilt

    Valerie Flournoy, Allyson Johnson, Listening Library

    Audiobook (Listening Library, Feb. 19, 2018)
    Valerie Flournoy and Jerry Pinkney created a warmhearted intergenerational story that became an award-winning perennial. Since then, children from all sorts of family situations and configurations continue to be drawn to its portrait of those bonds that create the fabric of family life.
  • The Patchwork Cat

    William Mayne, Nicola Bayley

    Hardcover (Knopf Books for Young Readers, Aug. 12, 1981)
    Tabby's family throws her favorite patchwork quilt into the garbage can, Tabby finds it and goes to sleep, ends up in the garbage dump, and must make her way--with the quilt--back home
    K
  • The Patchwork Torah

    Allison Maile Ofanansky, Elsa Oriol

    Library Binding (Kar-Ben Publishing ®, Jan. 1, 2014)
    As a child, David watches his grandfather, a Torah scribe or sofer, finish a Torah scroll for the synagogue. "A Torah is not something to be thrown away," his Grandfather explains. David's grandfather carefully stores the old Torah his new one has replaced in his cabinet, hoping to one day repair the letters so the Torah can be used again. David grows up and becomes a sofer just like his grandfather. Through the years, people bring him damaged Torahs they have saved from danger and disaster - one damaged by Nazi soldiers during World War II, one damaged in a fire in a synagogue, and one in flooding during Hurricane Katrina. David stores each of these precious Torahs in his cabinet, until his granddaughter Leah gives him the idea to make a recycled Torah from the salvaged Torah scrolls.
    N
  • The Patchwork Bike

    Maxine Beneba Clarke, Van Thanh Rudd

    Paperback (Candlewick, April 13, 2021)
    It has a bent bucket seat, bashed tin-can handlebars, and wood-cut wheels — and riding the patchwork bike that you and your crazy brothers made is the best fun in the whole village.When you live in a village at the edge of the no-go desert, you need to make your own fun. That's when you and your brothers get inventive and build a bike from scratch, using everyday items like an old milk pot (maybe Mum is still using it, maybe not) and a used flour sack. You can even make a license plate from bark if you want. The end result is a spectacular bike, perfect for whooping and laughing as you bumpetty bump over sand hills, past your fed-up mum and right through your mud-for-walls home. A joyous story by multi-award-winning author Maxine Beneba Clarke, beautifully illustrated by street artist Van Thanh Rudd.
  • The Patchwork Bike

    None

    Paperback (Lothian Children's Books, )
    None
  • The Patchwork Cat

    William MAYNE

    Hardcover (Jonathan Cape, March 15, 1981)
    Tabby's family throws her favorite patchwork quilt into the garbage can, Tabby finds it and goes to sleep, ends up in the garbage dump, and must make her way--with the quilt--back home
    L