A closeted gay werewolf bar mitzvah boy hopes nobody will learn about his crushing anxiety.
Benji Zeb can’t let on how panicked he is about his impending coming of age. He knows that his mother, the leader of their egalitarian Washington state werewolf kibbutz and wolf sanctuary, expects greatness from him. The only thing to do is pretend he isn’t gutted by terror and shortness of breath at the idea of leading their Modern Orthodox congregation in a Torah reading. Changing into werewolf form calms him down, but he’s not allowed to shift because his mother says he isn’t studying enough. Benji knows that one of the local ranchers, the racist and antisemitic stepdad of his estranged crush, Caleb Gao, is planning something dreadful. Why doesn’t anyone on the kibbutz listen when Benji tries to warn them? But when Caleb turns up at the kibbutz, it turns out that he and Benji have something unexpected in common: Caleb’s turned into a werewolf, too. Benji finds that introducing Caleb to lycanthropy and Judaism is surprisingly rewarding. The boys’ relationship is by turns hopeful and charmingly uncomfortable. In this overwhelmingly white rural area, Caleb has much to learn about Jews (information that’s sometimes heavy-handedly delivered). Biracial Caleb, who’s white and Chinese American, is startled to discover that though Benji’s white, many of the other kibbutz families aren’t. Benji’s warm family counterbalances the hate Caleb’s heard from his internet-radicalized stepdad.
Busy but sweet and optimistic.
(author’s note, resources) (Fantasy. 10-14)