Count from one to eight as eight families light another candle on their menorahs each night in celebration of the Jewish holiday. Features real working lights.
A menorah describes a family's joyous celebration of this Jewish holiday, from the first night to the eighth and last.
A few brave souls in a Nazi camp are determined to gather nine spoons to make a menorah for Chanukah.
A young boy in turn-of-the-century rural Russia learns that appearances are often deceiving after he steals and then tries to return a dreidel to the traveling peddler Shnook.
When the rabbi tells Mendel to get a table for the Chanukah menorah, Mendel makes the task more difficult than it should be.
An extended family celebrates the eight nights of Hanukkah.
The celebration of Hanukkah is introduced to young children in this book. In a contemporary setting, five young children, their parents and grandmother spend Hanukkah enjoying such traditions as lighting the menorah, making and spinning the dreydel and singing songs and prayers.
At Christmas-Hanukkah time, a Christian woodcarver gives a carved angel to a young Jewish friend, who struggles with accepting the Christmas gift until he realizes that friendship means the same thing in any religion.
A little girl breaks her handmade Hanukkah menorah but learns that, even broken, it can still have a role to play in the holiday celebration.