Tucson Jo

Fiction & Literature, Historical
Cover of the book Tucson Jo by Carol Matas, FICTIVE PRESS
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Author: Carol Matas ISBN: 9781927663080
Publisher: FICTIVE PRESS Publication: June 15, 2014
Imprint: Smashwords Edition Language: English
Author: Carol Matas
ISBN: 9781927663080
Publisher: FICTIVE PRESS
Publication: June 15, 2014
Imprint: Smashwords Edition
Language: English

2014 NATIONAL JEWISH BOOK AWARD FINALIST in the Children's and Young Adult category.

Appropriate for Middle Grades and up (age 9 plus).

“Papa is a tyrant; that’s what he is — a tyrant! And I will always be subject to his whims!”

When her father decides to run for mayor of Tucson in 1882, fourteen-year-old Josephine Fiedler is reluctant to support his bid. “I could be sealing my fate, helping to elect someone who wants nothing more than my docility.” With a mind of her own, Jo is in constant conflict with her father and doesn’t know how to back down when she feels she is in the right. “Without law, without order, there is no freedom,” states her father, but Jo wants nothing less than the freedom he promised her when he uprooted the family from “civilized” Boston to the Wild West of the Territory of Arizona because of his health. When violence erupts during the election campaign and her father’s opponent attacks him for being an Israelite, Jo has to reconsider her position and even what it means to be a Jew.

Inspired by Tucson’s first Jewish mayor, Tucson Jo is packed with action and deeds of derring-do, shootouts and holdups, while dealing with serious moral issues like right and wrong, law and order, and women’s rights.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

2014 NATIONAL JEWISH BOOK AWARD FINALIST in the Children's and Young Adult category.

Appropriate for Middle Grades and up (age 9 plus).

“Papa is a tyrant; that’s what he is — a tyrant! And I will always be subject to his whims!”

When her father decides to run for mayor of Tucson in 1882, fourteen-year-old Josephine Fiedler is reluctant to support his bid. “I could be sealing my fate, helping to elect someone who wants nothing more than my docility.” With a mind of her own, Jo is in constant conflict with her father and doesn’t know how to back down when she feels she is in the right. “Without law, without order, there is no freedom,” states her father, but Jo wants nothing less than the freedom he promised her when he uprooted the family from “civilized” Boston to the Wild West of the Territory of Arizona because of his health. When violence erupts during the election campaign and her father’s opponent attacks him for being an Israelite, Jo has to reconsider her position and even what it means to be a Jew.

Inspired by Tucson’s first Jewish mayor, Tucson Jo is packed with action and deeds of derring-do, shootouts and holdups, while dealing with serious moral issues like right and wrong, law and order, and women’s rights.

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