The Book of CandlesEight Poems for Hanukkah
Review posted November 14, 2025.
Clarion Books, 2025. 40 pages.
Review written October 13, 2025, from a library book.
Starred Review
As the title says, this is a book of eight poems for Hanukkah, one for each night of the festival, one for each candle. It's in picture book form, so in the library, we've got it in the Holiday Picture Books section, where we think it will get plenty of checkouts. For Sonderbooks, I'm going to put it on the Children's Nonfiction page in the Poetry section, because it actually gives good information about Hanukkah, besides the lovely poems.
A couple years ago, a Jewish friend challenged her non-Jewish friends on Facebook to purchase menorahs and light candles in solidarity, and I did so. Now with this book, I have learned more about the holiday. So I recommend it to both Jewish and non-Jewish families. Each poem is lovely, and each is accompanied by "A Thought" for that night.
I especially liked "A Thought for the Fifth Night":
It's tradition to avoid doing work while the candles burn, and this goes for everyone! So you can wait until after they fizzle out to do your homework, but you should make sure your parents take a break, too, before they wash the dinner dishes or check their email. The goal is to focus on the light and each other.
That's far more challenging than spending half a minute to turn on the Christmas tree lights!
The poems and pictures themselves take us through a particular family celebrating Hanukkah together, ending with watching the candles fizzle out.
I also love the Author's Note at the back:
Hanukkah is a funny sort of holiday. It isn't like Rosh Hashanah or Yom Kippur, when we set aside our lives and disappear into the synagogue. Instead, at Hanukkah, we live our daily lives - go to school, play and laugh as usual, even quarrel (not too often, hopefully).
But then, each night, we set aside time to care, to notice, to light our candles.
Hanukkah doesn't stop our busy world from spinning, but as we move through each day, we do so with an awareness that something is coming at sunset, something special. Something silly or joyful or peaceful.
And with this book, Laurel Snyder and Leanne Hatch have added a bit of beauty and thoughtfulness to lucky family's Hanukkah celebrations.
