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Gideon's People by Carolyn Meyer
Gideon's People by Carolyn Meyer












A vivid setting and the slow unfolding of the relationship between Isaac and Annie are Meyer's strong suits. Annie, who is also 12, explains that 16-year-old Gideon plans to leave the community before his baptism, though he knows that if he does he will be shunned. Similarities between Yiddish and Pennsylvania Dutch make communication possible, allowing 12-year-old Isaac to pick up on a family rift. Two deeply religious cultures bound by strict laws are thrown together when Isaac, an Orthodox Jewish boy, recovers from injuries at an Amish farm in 1911.

Gideon

Alice Casey Smith, Sayreville War Memorial High School, NJ, Gr. Many of the complex issues raised here are explored in greater depth in Kathryn Lasky's Beyond the Divide (Macmillan, 1983) or Chaim Potok's The Chosen (Fawcett, 1987). While Isaac's faith is not tested in abusive circumstances, as it is with the Amish teen, worldly interactions complicate matters. Gideon's stern, unyielding father illustrates the vast emotional chasm that results from a heavy-handed approach in parent/teen relations, universally, in any culture, at any time. Deft characterizations and juxtaposition of fathers and sons amplify similarities and differences between the families and cultures. She fears losing him forever and begs Isaac to help her persuade Gideon to stay.

Gideon

His sister Annie finds his secret stash of "englische" clothes, a forbidden copy of Treasure Island, and a harmonica. Gideon Stolzfus, 16, chafes under the rigid tenets of his family's local sect, and plans to run away to his uncle's more lenient community. When Isaac Litvak, 12, is injured on an Amish farm, his Jewish peddler father leaves him behind to recuperate with the whispered reminder, "Remember who you are." Though kind and well-meaning, the foreign-speaking family's eating habits and religious laws are strange. In this novel set at the turn of the century, two boys'one Orthodox Jew and the other Amish'are brought together by chance.














Gideon's People by Carolyn Meyer