Chil­dren’s

Jail­bait

  • Review
By – August 6, 2012

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.

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