Alicia Jo Rabins is an award-winning performer, musician, poet, and Jewish scholar. Author of Even God Has Bad Parenting Days, published by Behrman House, she has also written articles for Kveller, Ecotone Magazine, Tablet Magazine, and American Poetry Review, among others. Rabins graduated Phi Beta Kappa from Barnard College (Creative Writing), holds an MFA in poetry from Warren Wilson and an MA in Jewish Women's and Gender Studies from the Jewish Theological Seminary. She lives in Portland, Oregon. Gene Pendon is the artist behind the mural Tower of Songs, Hommage Leonard Cohen, in Montreal. Hel has a Bachelors degree in Fine-Arts (drawing and painting) from Concordia University. In 1998, he co-founded Heavyweight Production House (HVW8), now based in Montreal and in Los Angeles. He also co-creates the Heavyweight Art Installation, an international project that partners live painting to music and to urban cultures. He lives in Montreal, Canada.
""Pendon’s cover art for this glimpse of the man and career of Leonard Cohen widens the hole in the middle of a vinyl record to spotlight the subject’s long-faced profile, hat back on his head, arms cradling the guitar he was seldom without. This charming picture will pull readers into the page to find out more: such a mournful face is provocatively juxtaposed with the declaration, “Hallelujah!” Endpapers show a photorealistic portrait of Cohen pasted like a movie poster on a wall but actually against a backdrop of city buildings; it’s the mural the illustrator spearheaded, honoring Cohen in Montreal where he was born. Raised in a house full of music on Shabbat and in the synagogue where his grandfather was a rabbi, the boy was fascinated when he came across a gentleman in the park playing Spanish guitar. “Can you teach me?” He became a songwriter but was nagged by the feeling that one song containing the one thing he needed to say lingered within him. Back matter provides more details about his life and the mural project. This is the right treatment to pique children’s interest into knowing or finding out more; the author’s language is sentimental but sincere, while the graphic novel-like art in spreads of city scenes and stage scenes are atmospheric and bold. Rabins, also a musician, has offered a link where she performs her cover of the titular song. VERDICT A valentine to Cohen and all artistry, this book reminds older readers to look within and may inspire children to aim high with their own gifts."" —School Library Journal ""Centering the now well-known song 'Hallelujah,' Rabins and Pendon movingly recount the life of Canadian Jewish musician Leonard Cohen (1934-2016). Early pages frame Cohen as a deep-feeling youth from a musical family, and text carefully draws on the subject's lyrics to characterize his musical awakening (""From that day on, Leonard wrote songs about the world around him—about waking up with messy hair, about seeing a bird perched on a wire""). Plotting moves quickly to Cohen's professional success, and pages proceed to zero in on the protagonist's forbearance in connection with the completion of 'Hallelujah'—a tune about 'how life is as mysterious as a secret chord.' Though the song is initially rejected by Cohen's record company, it slowly finds its way 'inside hearts all over the world.' Acoustic guitars abound in loose cartoon portraits, which capture the joyfully quotidian spirit of the musician's work. An author's note and further biographical information conclude. Ages 5-8."" —Publisher's Weekly ""This biography of poet, singer, and songwriter Leonard Cohen for young readers emphasizes the influences on his creativity and his dedication to finding the perfect lyrics for his songs. The narrative mentions his growing up in a Jewish family in Montreal, the grandson of a rabbi, and his early exposure to Hebrew prayers and Yiddish folksongs. Later, everything around him, from birds to tea and oranges to observing sorrow and loneliness would figure into his music. The narrative focuses on the years he worked on the song Hallelujah and how important the song was to him. The book notes how initially the song was rejected by Cohen’s record company, and how it was universally adopted, used memorably in films and television shows and translated into several languages, after it was covered by 'a musician named Jeff' (the endnotes mention the covers by John Cale in 1991 and Jeff Buckley in 1994). This title offers an introduction not only to Cohen and the creative process, but to the music industry and how songs are marketed. The illustrations beautifully capture the spirit of the man and his music. Pendon is noted as spearheading the twenty-one story mural of Cohen on a Montreal building, and the cityscape with the mural makes up the book’s stunning endpapers. Hallelujah! complements the biography of Cohen from the Little People, BIG DREAMS series by Maria Isabel Sánchez Vegara (Frances Lincoln, 2024), which gives a more general background to his life and work. It is appropriate for most school or public library collections, especially larger libraries, those in Jewish elementary schools, and those emphasizing the arts."" —Association of Jewish Libraries ""Many people who love Leonard Cohen’s celebrated anthem, “Hallelujah” know little about its author. In their new picture book, Alicia Jo Rabins and Gene Pendon introduce the song’s author to a young audience in the context of Cohen’s Jewish heritage. Simplifying some of the more disturbing and intense aspects of “Hallelujah’s” lyrics, they succeed in presenting an essential and truthful picture of the composition’s spirituality, and its lasting significance to a range of audiences. Cohen’s childhood was a complicated mix of security and tension. Emphasizing the warmth of Jewish ritual and the deep roots of his identity, Rabins mentions that Cohen’s grandfather was a rabbi. While it is true that his maternal grandfather was a distinguished Talmudic scholar, the juxtaposition of this information with a scene of Cohen’s lively synagogue implies that the older man officiated there. Although he did not, he exerted a great influence on the future songwriter. Rabins’s text transitions to exploring Cohen’s childhood sadness, which compelled him to search for meaning in music and poetry. Distilling the essence of Cohen’s artistry is a difficult task for a children’s author. Rabins succeeds in telling the truth about the multicultural elements that inspired Cohen, while also maintaining that his Judaism remained at the core of his vision. He emerges as an appealing figure, a boy who grows to manhood still struggling with conflicting parts of his psyche. Reserved and ambivalent, he eventually finds his voice and becomes a performer whose songs resonate because they “opened people’s hearts.” One of those songs, whose genesis was difficult, was “Hallelujah.” Rabins describes how Cohen kept searching through hours of frustration, until he found “the very last word and the very last chord.” Pendon’s illustrations have a nostalgic tone and dramatic inflections. Scenes of Cohen’s family Shabbat and his Montreal home frame the beginnings of his quest for meaning in a specific setting. One felicitous pairing of words and pictures has a table set with the tea and oranges that adult readers will recognize from his song “Suzanne,” while the window looks out on a scene from his home city. The famous bird on a wire, colored in pastel violet and singing outside of Cohen’s bedroom, is also identified as one more inspiration for his songwriting. Genius is not always recognized, and Pendon portrays an obtuse record executive gesturing with an empathic thumbs down as Cohen hopefully presents his magnum opus. But eventually his song’s universality triumphs, presented here in interfaith settings, around a campfire, and serenading a cat from a mid-century television set. Rabins brings “Hallelujah” to a child’s level of understanding, so that a song that refers to David and Bathsheba and Samson’s weakness for a woman is translated as an acknowledgement of human imperfection. Love and anger can coexist, as Cohen learned from life itself, and from the biblical figures who animated his imagination. Hallelujah: The Story of Leonard Cohen is highly recommended and includes an afterword with further biographical information."" —Jewish Book Council