![]() So many little details stood out to me, from the way in which Papa changes his demeanor, when he sees the children waiting for him at the subway stop - he comes up the stairs stooped over with exhaustion, but immediately straightens himself up upon seeing Leah and Harry, so that they do not suspect how tired and beaten down he is - to the realistic way in which the story ends. Although less of a story about Passover itself, it was nevertheless an immensely engaging tale of family, and of the human-animal connection. That second story, which is set at Yom Kippur, was my introduction to these characters, and so moving and thought-provoking did I find it, that I determined to read this Passover tale, when the holiday next came around. Foiled in their attempt by their father, who is kind but firm in the matter of returning the carp, Leah and Harry are heartbroken, until they are finally given a tiny kitten, as their very first pet.įirst published in 1972, The Carp in the Bathtub was the first of two stories about Leah and Harry Katz, followed by First Fast in 1987. ![]() One Passover, the siblings become particularly attached to the carp in their bathtub, and try to save him. ![]() Show More Harry's mother would always buy a live fish, a week before the holiday, in order to have the freshest ingredients when cooking. ![]()
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