Jane is in real estate. Today is Saturday. Jane has an open house. She must schlep
the Open House signs to the car. See Jane schlep
. Schlep
, Jane. Schlep
. Schlep, schlep, schlep.
In text that captures the unque rhythms of the original
Dick and Jane readers, and in 35 all-new illustrations, a story unfolds in which Dick and Jane--hero and heroine of the classic books for children that generations of Americans have used when learning to read--manage to express shades of feeling and nuances of meaning that ordinary English just can't deliver. How? By speaking Yiddish, employing terms that convey an
attitude--part plucky self-assertion, part ironic fatalism. When Dick
schmoozes, when Jane
kvetches, when their children
fress noodles at a Chinese restaurant, the clash of cultures produces genuine hilarity.