What Makes Us

What Makes Us

by Rafi Mittlefehldt

Narrated by Graham Halstead

Unabridged — 8 hours, 15 minutes

What Makes Us

What Makes Us

by Rafi Mittlefehldt

Narrated by Graham Halstead

Unabridged — 8 hours, 15 minutes

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Overview

A viral video reveals a teen's dark family history, leaving him to reckon with his heritage, legacy, and identity in this fiery, conversation-starting novel.

Eran Sharon knows nothing of his father except that he left when Eran was a baby. Now a senior in high school and living with his protective but tight-lipped mother, Eran is a passionate young man deeply interested in social justice and equality. When he learns that the Houston police have launched a program to increase traffic stops, Eran organizes a peaceful protest. But a heated moment at the protest goes viral, and a reporter connects the Sharon family to a tragedy fifteen years earlier - and asks if Eran is anything like his father, a supposed terrorist. Soon enough, Eran is wondering the same thing, especially when the people he's gone to school and temple with for years start to look at him differently. Timely, powerful, and full of nuance, Rafi Mittlefehldt's sophomore novel confronts the prejudices, fears, and strengths of family and community, striking right to the heart of what makes us who we are.


Editorial Reviews

From the Publisher

Narrator Graham Halstead soars as he uses his versatile voice to portray multiple characters in this poignant and sometimes painfully honest young adult novel.” —AudioFile Magazine

School Library Journal

09/01/2019

Gr 9 Up—It's a toss-up whether this book focuses on single mother Devorah or on her teenaged son Avi, and that's a compliment. Entangled by their love for each other, these two struggle to come to terms with the past that Devorah has tried to protect Avi from with her silence: he doesn't know that his father killed himself and three others with a bomb. "This is not our fight," Devorah told the press; Avi was two at the time. She changed her name to Eema and Avi's to Eran, moved from New York to Houston, and kept her secret as her son grew. Readers meet Eran in high school. He mythologizes his father as the absent parent and blames Eema, the one who stayed, for the anger he cannot always manage, even as he admires her self-control. In his rage Eran resembles his father, but only Eema knows this. After Eran and his friends organize a protest against gun violence and a negative encounter goes viral, an investigative journalist uncovers what his father did. As mother and son reckon with the truth and their little family of two hangs in the balance, a local synagogue offers refuge and a sense of belonging. This coming-of-age story has heft—and much relevance. VERDICT Strong medicine for readers interested in how society accepts or rejects those who are different. An excellent choice for mature audiences.—Georgia Christgau, Middle College High School, Long Island City, NY

NOVEMBER 2019 - AudioFile

Narrator Graham Halstead soars as he uses his versatile voice to portray multiple characters in this poignant and sometimes painfully honest young adult novel. Halstead's talent is on full display as he delivers varied accents in a story about about culture, religion, and fear of the unknown. As the sins of the main character's extremist father surface, a Houston community reacts. Halstead seamlessly transitions from an angry and emotional 17-year-old to his Israeli mother, who is the picture of stoicism and firmness in the face of new and old allegations. Halstead delivers the shouting of a mob with accents ranging from upper-class tones to a stereotypical Southern drawl. The listener will be convinced this is a full cast. A.R.F. Winner of AudioFile Earphones award © AudioFile 2019, Portland, Maine

Kirkus Reviews

2019-07-14
A crowded sophomore effort tackles nature and nurture, family secrets, friendship, the place of violence in protest, terrorism and patriotism, Judaism and Zionism, and all the things that make a person.

Racially indeterminate 17-year-old Eran knows he gets his (sometimes uncontrolled) anger from his Israeli mother. He is sure his unknown father could have provided the cure—until he learns his Algerian Israeli father was a terrorist who bombed an Israeli Day parade before being fatally shot himself. In first-person, present-tense, Eran deals with the fallout when he gets involved in a social justice protest, his father's past becomes news, and people in their suburban Texas town suspect he and his mother are terrorists, agitating to "SEND THEM BACK!" Intercut is the third-person, present-tense story of Eran's new friend Jade, who is black and Baptist. Parallels between the two are made painfully obvious: Eran notes "no one ever talks about sunrise"; hundreds of pages later, Jade thinks the same about sunsets. Jade's family also harbors secrets, and she too is deeply affected by events she doesn't recall. With lyrical prose bordering on overdone ("Many girls are drawn to the melody, she knows, but melodies bore Jade") and a plot that stalls when the narrative moves to Jade, this is a book that wants to be many things and falls into an awkward space between quiet and contemplative and boldly topical, doing justice to neither.

Provocative but uneven. (Fiction. 13-18)

Product Details

BN ID: 2940177328171
Publisher: Brilliance Audio
Publication date: 10/15/2019
Edition description: Unabridged

Read an Excerpt

I

My dad only exists in a memory.
I’m so young, barely old enough to stand by myself. Can I walk yet? I’d probably make it a couple steps, stumble, fall back on my ass like Declan’s little cousin in the video from New Year’s. Maybe the shock would make me laugh like she did; probably I would’ve cried.
There’s light everywhere in this memory: pouring through the windows, from the bulbs overhead, from his smile. He’s so much taller than me. I have to crane my head way back to look at him. My neck aches from the strain, but it doesn’t bother me enough to stop. I don’t know what room I’m in​kitchen? living room?​but it’s not the house I live in now or the apartment from when I was little. This is someplace different, a home I only ever 
see in this memory.
He swoops down and picks me up, lifts me high, and now I’m taller than him. Over his head I can see my mom, and I feel the grin bursting on my face. He spins me around in one great circle, and I laugh and close my eyes, watching the light change through the inside of my eyelids. He kisses me hard on one cheek, on the other, sets me down. He says goodbye as the warmth of those kisses spreads to the rest of my face.
I told my mom about this once, when I was younger. Maybe six or seven. We were eating dinner, and she was reading some
old magazine. She didn’t look up, just kept picking at her salad. I watched her eyes scanning back and forth across the lines of gray text, and just when I decided she hadn’t heard me, she said, “This did not happen.”
You ever think about how lonely your oldest memory is? The only one from its time, nothing else to back it up. Those faint images that have been with you the longest at the mercy of your own self-­doubt and mistrust.
This memory is hazy now, corrupted by the time that’s gone by. I can’t tell anymore if it’s something that actually happened or what I imagined that something to be.
Or even less, the memory of a dream.
 
II
 
My mom’s hair is all curls. They wiggle when she shakes her head, even a bit. It’s a big, bushy mass, jet black, a bird’s nest. I’d have to get close to see the roots, the tiniest bit of brown, probably not even a quarter inch. Eema will dye it again tonight. She won’t let more than a couple weeks go by.
“Why do you do that?” I asked her once. I’d watched her as she unwrapped her towel turban, quick but careful, practiced but vigilant, a ritual I’d seen millions of times but never thought about.
When I finally did, it occurred to me how weird it was. Eema’s not one to care about appearances more than is absolutely necessary. She’s not sloppy, not untidy; she just has no interest in cosmetics. If it’s not practical, it’s not worth doing. I’ve never seen her wear lipstick.
She paused in the middle of toweling off her hair, as if she had never considered the question. “I prefer black,” she said. That was that.
I watch her now as she reads the Chronicle, curls shaking in tiny eruptions. The actual print version, so quaint. I look for the steam above her coffee and don’t see it. She almost never finishes her coffee, lets it cool half-­full, but still complains about how expensive chicory is.
 
“Bye, Eema,” I say.
“Study hard,” she responds, not looking up. I mouth it with her, something I do every time. She never sees.
Declan climbs in, clicks his seat belt in place carefully. I stare at him as he does, at the mismatched three-­piece suit he’s wearing under a giant overcoat.
He settles in, smoothing down his coat, then notices the stillness. He looks over, sighs.
“Okay. I know. But I wanted to wear my new pants for the first Friday of the school year,” he says, pushing his giant overcoat aside so I can see them. “But then my only belt broke, so I needed this vest to cover the waistband, and then I needed a tie if I was wearing a vest, right? But then the back of the vest is kind of messed up, so I thought my jacket could cover it.” Declan twists around, displaying for me all the things wrong with the pieces of his outfit. “And then my jacket sleeves are frayed, since it’s really Don’s old jacket he had in ninth grade, I think? So I needed the overcoat to cover that.
I wait for him to stop.
“It’s ninety-­five degrees,” I say.
“We’ll be inside.”
I stare.
And when I have stared long enough, I shift into reverse.
I drive Eema’s old Ford Fiesta from the nineties. It has an ancient, musty smell and no air-conditioning, but I’m seventeen and without a better choice. Declan still asks for a ride, even though he has other friends with newer, less shitty cars. I don’t mind. Why 
would I?
“Deck Lehn?” Eema asked when she first met him, trying out the sound of his Irish name on her Israeli tongue.
“Yes, Miss Sharon,” Declan said, and I winced.
Eema frowned and shook her hair. “No, no. Shah-­ROHN,” she corrected, as if expecting flawless Hebrew from this kid. “I am not rich Connecticut housewife.”
This was in eighth grade.
Declan’s looking at his schedule card now, scanning the misaligned print he memorized a month before school even started. We have three classes and lunch together this year, not bad.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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