In this compelling young adult novel, 15- year-old Andrea Kaplan is a friendless loner and social outcast who is mercilessly teased at school for her large breasts and ignored at home by her emotionally distant parents. When Andi becomes sexually involved with Frank, an abusive and controlling man more than twice her age, she convinces herself that she’s in love. Andi’s encounters with Frank are graphic and disturbing, but Leslea Newman lightens the dark tone of the novel with humor, wit, and typical teenage angst. Readers are relieved when Andi is finally able to walk away from the affair, hopeful that she will not fall victim again. While Andi’s Jewish identity is mentioned several times throughout the book, it does not impact the character’s decisions or the plot. However, Jailbait is an important book for Jewish libraries — it is a powerful reminder to teens, as well as parents and teachers, that Jewish girls are not immune to becoming victims of illicit and abusive relationships. Newman also uncovers Andi’s inner thoughts and feelings, helping the reader understand how and why teenage girls become trapped in these types of relationships. Ages 15 – 17.
Rachel Kamin has been a synagogue librarian and Jewish educator for over twenty-five years and has worked at North Suburban Synagogue Beth El in Highland Park, IL since 2008, currently serving as the Director of Lifelong Learning. A past chair of the Sydney Taylor Book Award Committee and past editor of Book Reviews for Children & Teens for the Association of Jewish Libraries News & Reviews, her articles and book reviews appear in numerous publications. She has been a member of the American Library Association’s Sophie Brody Book Award Committee since 2021.