Jane Yolen is an award-winning American writer of fantasy, SF and children’s books. Usually, the children’s books are speculative fiction. She is known as “the Hans Christian Andersen of American children’s literature.”
Her son, Adam Stemple, is also a writer of spec fic, and they have written two books together so far. That might sound impressive, but Jane Yolen has written over 400 books! To be honest, I can’t think of a writer who has done anywhere near as many. And I am not even going to try to tell you about many of them. At the end of this post, I’ll add a link to her bibliography.
She is Jewish, so has written a fair bit on Jewish themes. The most famous is The Devil’s Arithmetic. I do have a copy, but it has been a while since I read it.
A young Jewish girl, Hannah, is with her family at a Passover Seder. She is bored. The same stories are told every year. Family members are Holocaust survivors.
It is traditional for children to open the door during the Seder, for the prophet Elijah. A cup of wine is kept for him. Hannah opens the doors but instead of the hallway of the apartment, she finds herself in a village in wartime Poland. The people she meets think she is a girl called Chaya, who has been sick.
She makes friends with some other girls there, but they are all dragged off to a concentration camp, where they do forced labour. She only manages to survive with the help of a girl called Rivka. When the Nazis take them to the gas chamber, leaving Hannah alone, she takes Rivka’s place. Hannah wakes up at the Seder, not long after. She finds out that her Aunt Eva is Rivka, the girl she saved.
There was a film of this story. I found it on Daily Motion, a web site that has a lot of films you won’t find elsewhere. Here is a link.
https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x9z8r4w
She wrote more Jewish themed books. Another one, Mapping The Bones, is Hansel And Gretel with the Holocaust. It isn’t the only one on that theme, but like anything Jane writes, it’s amazing.
A short story called “Granny Rumple” is based on another fairy tale, “Rumplestiltskin”. Jane wrote a note with it, saying that out of all the characters in that fairy tale, the only one who kept his word was Rumplestiltskin.
In this story, set in the nineteenth century in a small town in Europe, the “dwarf” is a young Jewish moneylender. The girl wants to marry the mayor’s son, but her father has bragged she can do tapestries. She can’t. But the moneylender feels sorry for her and buys the tapestries to help her. He just wants what it cost.
When she doesn’t pay the money back, his wife goes to ask for it, and she screams that he wants her baby. You can guess what happens next. Pogrom.
I’ll leave it here and give you a link to all her works. You are unlikely to ever get through the lot, and she hasn’t stopped writing. But looking at the list, you might choose a few.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jane_Yolen_bibliography
See you tomorrow for the final post in A to Z!