Mendel the Mess-Up
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- Pre-Order
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- Expected Dec 17, 2024
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- $10.99
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- Pre-Order
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- $10.99
Publisher Description
Cursed from birth, Mendel Schlotz is the unluckiest kid in his village.
He’s also the only one who can save it.
Ask anyone—twelve-year-old Mendel can’t do anything right. When he tries to herd goats, they get out. When he tries to chop wood, he breaks the ax. It’s embarrassing to be called “Mendel the Mess Up,” but it’s worse to be so clumsy that he can’t even stand to read aloud without destroying the classroom. Nobody expects Mendel to keep out of trouble… least of all himself.
But when the Cossacks invade Mendel’s remote Jewish village of Lintvint (famous for Lintvint kvatch, which is made from a very special ingredient), Mendel’s not the only one in trouble. When he slips away from the mountain caves where his fellow villagers are hiding, out of certainty he’ll find a way to make things worse if he’s around them, he discovers an unexpected opportunity to save the day.
Mendel’s always been different because everything he does turns into disaster. Now, he’s the only one who can help the people who doubt him.
Could Mendel’s bad luck be the key to saving Lintvint? Or will his plan to drive the Cossacks off go as badly as everyone—including him—expects?
Sympathetic, funny, and warm, this fast-paced middle-grade graphic novel from a veteran Jewish comics star reminds young readers who feel just a little out of place in their world that sometimes our weaknesses can be our greatest strengths.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Put Fiddler on the Roof and A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum in a blender, add a jigger or two of Seinfeld, and the result is this boisterous and affirming graphic novel. "Everything I do turns into a DISASTER!" bemoans the 12-year-old eponymous protagonist as he clumsily maneuvers his way through Lintvint, his financially struggling shtetl. He blames his inability to "be GOOD at something" on Starface Matja, the village witch who cursed Mendel's pregnant mother for purchasing the last of a vendor's wares. When murderous Cossacks invade Lintvint, Mendel becomes the last line of defense. But can a "mess-up" like Mendel save the day? According to Starface Matja—who, in a climactic apology, claims "I've always had poor impulse control" as the reason for her curse working—"the most effective curses are the ones we put on OURSELVES," opening the door to limitless potential and personal introspection. LaBan (Edge City) skillfully unspools the jokes and fast-paced plot with broad cartooning reminiscent of classic Sunday comics and wraps it up with a triumphant depiction of a quintessential Jewish coming-of-age tradition. Back matter provides historical and religious context. Ages 8–12.