or' look like?" and "How do we know God really exists if we can't see Him?" Because Nothing Looks Like God does a great job of answering these questions in a way that children will understand and appreciate: What does God look like? God looks like nothing .. And nothing looks like God. But there are many things you can- not see. And still we are sure they are there... Like cool breezes on a hot summer night, Or the rays of the sun drying puddles of rain. Like the long hours until supper- time, Or the short minutes of a day at the beach... Like the kindness in someone's voice, Or the happiness in a song. Like the pride when Mom or Dad helps in your class, Or the jumpy excitement at the start of a holiday. You know it there, but there is noth- ing to see. One complaint: Illustrations show a Japanese family, Hispanics, African- Americans, American-Indians, a boy in a wheelchair — but no one in a kippah or wearing a Star of David. post:), then challenges them along the way to find all kinds of Jewish items. In the dining room, children are asked to find a seder plate and a sho- far; in the kitchen, they will find Pesach dishes and a tzedakah box; in the boy's bedroom they see a Purim costume and a Simchat Torah flag. The objects aren't hidden; tots at all familiar with these will locate them in a minute. But finding them will provide children with a sense of accomplishment, and it's fun for the younger set to finally have a Jewish book that provides them with an interactive text. 'fi e it: - The valeY ref Ble;.sjii inustmred t-..y Kiraly Kreisw,th My Jewish Home by Rabbi Andrew Goldstein, with illustrations by Kinny Kreiswirth. Copyright 2000, Kar-Ben Copies, Inc. 10 pages. Hardback. $4.95. This is a gem of a little book for tiny children (about age 3-4). A boy takes readers through his house ("When you knock on my door, you know mine is a Jewish home. There's a mezuzah on the door- (This is accompanied by a prayer which, appropriately enough, thanks God "who has not made me a slave.") There% also a very nice compilation at the end of the book that tells when the brachot included_are traditionally recited. The art is OK (though the illustrator has had work appear in The Wall Street Journal, you won't be wowed by it here), certainly not a reason to buy the book. But if you're looking for a new way to add or increase spiritual moments to your life, or the lives or your children, this is a nice place to start. SOLOMON and theTREES man Biets-Anel iiiiis!rated by Est Silverbtrg-Kiss na. The God . Around Us: Volume II: The Valley of Blessings by Mira Pollak Brichto, with illustrations by Selina Alko. Copyright 2001, Union of American Hebrew Congregations Press. 30 pages. Hardback. S 12.95. kabbi Andrew Goldstein thanks to God: As birds that take to air in flight And beasts that roam the jungle night, No one a slave was meant to be — For God, who made us, made us free Despite the trite title, The God Around Us is actually quite a nice book, though it shares, with The Wonder of Nothing (review above), a peculiar deficiency: not a one of these children is clearly Jewish. (Here again, there are Asian and African-American and white children, boys and girls, but no one you could point to as Jewish.) The God Around Us (I promise, I won't mention the title again), is a collection of brachot, blessings, in English and in Hebrew. It's never didactic; instead, small poems aside each blessing lovingly suggest why we would want to express our Solomon and the Trees by Matt Biers-Ariel, with illustrations by Esti Silverberg-Kiss. Copyright 2001, published by the Union of American Hebrew Congregations Press. 30 pages. Hardback. $12.95. Midrash is just about as "in" a term as you could possibly get in the Jewish community. Based on accounts in the Torah, midrashim are interpretations, not Halachah (Jewish law) and not always factual. They're kind of like those stories your parents used to tell about walking 50 miles in the snow to school with nothing but a hard boiled egg for lunch and being grateful they were even allowed to go! The point of a midrash is often to help you learn a lesson, and lots of poetic license may be involved. Solomon and the Trees is based on a midrash about King Solomon, renowned not only for his profound wisdom but his passionate interest in all of God's world, including nature and animals. In this story, Solomon — though clearly identified as the King Solomon, the son of King David — makes his first appearance clad in attire that looks straight out of L.L. Bean, or maybe Old Navy. He comes to the forest to talk to the animals and the trees, especially his favorite, a butter- scotch-colored gem that "reigned over the forest, like a powerful queen pro- tecting her subjects." He listens to the water that flows through her roots, which was "the happiest music Solomon and his ani- mal friends knew. It signaled a healthy new year not only for the tree, but for the entire forest. As long as the forest was healthy, Solomon knew his world would be well." Then Solomon becomes king, and his subjects build him a grand Temple, and prepare for him glorious robes and the most precious jewels and an astonishing throne made of (dramatic music called for at this point) — wood from a very special tree! (In soap operas, this would be the moment for what's called "the consternation fade out," when a character stands silent, clearly in the midst of troublesome thought as,to what will be. And we all can clearly imagine what is about happen in this story ...) When — gasp — Solomon sees that his tree, and others, have been destroyed just to build his throne, he promises at first to punish those guilty. But then he realizes they were only try- ing to please him, so instead he vows to rebuild the forest and then he dies a happy man. The art in this book is fabulous; inter- estingly, the illustrator graduated from the Fashion Institute of Technology. 3/9 As to the story, however, was this 2001 59