 
	   
	The Only Daughter
Rachele Luzzato is 12 years old when she learns her   father is seriously ill. While her family are looking forward to her Bat-Mitzvah,   Rachele's teachers happen to cast her as the Madonna in the school's   Christmas play. Pulled in opposing directions, Rachele feels the threads of   her life begin to untangle.    With the fear of losing her father, various forces   compete to guide and take care of Rachele: from her charismatic Jewish   grandfather, to her Catholic grandparents on her mother's side; and even an   old teacher who believes the young girl might take solace from a nineteenth-century   novel.    These disparate influences ultimately blend in Rachele's   imagination to create a fantasy that transcends the religious and cultural   conflicts of her everyday life with one simple hope: to end the loneliness felt   by an only daughter.    With great subtlety and tenderness, A.B. Yehoshua   paints a portrait of a young girl at the beginning of her journey into   adulthood.        
Author: A.B. Yehoshua
  Format: Paperback, 168 pages, 134mm x 214mm, 194 g
  
  Published: 2022, Halban Publishers, United Kingdom
  Genre: General & Literary Fiction
  
                
                  Description
                  
                
                
Rachele Luzzato is 12 years old when she learns her   father is seriously ill. While her family are looking forward to her Bat-Mitzvah,   Rachele's teachers happen to cast her as the Madonna in the school's   Christmas play. Pulled in opposing directions, Rachele feels the threads of   her life begin to untangle.    With the fear of losing her father, various forces   compete to guide and take care of Rachele: from her charismatic Jewish   grandfather, to her Catholic grandparents on her mother's side; and even an   old teacher who believes the young girl might take solace from a nineteenth-century   novel.    These disparate influences ultimately blend in Rachele's   imagination to create a fantasy that transcends the religious and cultural   conflicts of her everyday life with one simple hope: to end the loneliness felt   by an only daughter.    With great subtlety and tenderness, A.B. Yehoshua   paints a portrait of a young girl at the beginning of her journey into   adulthood.        
              
         
      The Only Daughter
         
    