For those of you who do not have access to School Library Journal, the
text of Rosen's rebuttal and the other letter to the editor are copied
below.  Obviously, Rosen is maintaining that their books "remain neutral
and seek consensus," translate "complex and controversial topics into
balanced and reliable text that is accessible to the readership," are
"fact checked and vetted by an outside expert," and are of "high
quality" and "invaluable to any reader with a commitment to or interest
in Israel and the Middle East."  I advise you to read them for yourself
- I'm confident that you will come to the same conclusions that Kathy
Noble and I did.

Rachel Kamin, Director
Temple Israel Libraries & Media Center
West Bloomfield, MI

Misinformed Findings

As the Editorial Director of The Rosen Publishing Group's Young Adult
division, I am writing in response to the inaccurate letter from Rachel
Kamin published in SLJ's May 2005 issue. In this letter, Ms. Kamin
rebuts a mostly positive SLJ review of two of the books in our "War and
Conflict in the Middle East" series, The Six-Day War and The Yom Kippur
War.

I do not have room to refute all of Ms. Kamin's criticisms here, but I
thought it important to demonstrate that she offers a slanted criticism
of these books that does not acknowledge all of the information actually
presented in the titles. For example, Ms. Kamin claims that Mr.
Broyles's reference to Jerusalem in 63 b.c. as Palestine is incorrect.
However, this fact has different scholarly interpretations and
perspectives, and she adheres to only one of them. Some scholars propose
that the origin of the name Palestine can be traced to the fifth century
b.c. to the Greek historian Herodotus. Other scholars allege other
dates. The point that Ms. Kamin ignores is that these competing claims
reflect the varied political ideologies and agendas of those who put
them forth. Mr. Broyles attempts to remain neutral and seek consensus in
what is often a fiercely partisan historical minefield.

In answer to Ms. Kamin's criticism about our authors' qualifications, I
want to point out that both Broyles and Rosenberg are professional
writers who have a unique skill in translating complex and controversial
topics into balanced and reliable text that is accessible to the
readership that Rosen serves. In addition, each manuscript we publish is
thoroughly fact checked and vetted by an outside expert in the specific
field. The two titles in question were reviewed by Dr. Itai Sneh, who
has a Ph.D. in History from Columbia University, an M.A. in East
European Jewish History from McGill University, and a B.A. in the
History of the Jewish People from Hebrew University.

Ms. Kamin's comment about the use of Web research and scholarship is
also misleading. In addition to using books and primary-source
materials, all Rosen authors use only reliable and accurate Web sites to
support their research. Among the sites referenced by the authors are
the University of Texas at Austin and the Anti-Defamation League. These
are widely recognized as legitimate, scholarly sources of unquestioned
integrity.

We vehemently refute Rachel Kamin's misinformed findings on a high
quality series invaluable to any reader with a commitment to or interest
in Israel and the Middle East, or, more importantly, to any student who
has not yet discovered why this subject is of such vital importance.

--Iris Rosoff, Editorial Director Young Adult Division The Rosen
Publishing Group New York City, NY

The System Failed Us
After reading Rachel Kamin's letter (May 2005, p. 13), I took a closer
look at The Yom Kippur War. As Kamin states, there is no information
about the Yom Kippur War provided by any of the recommended
organizations. I took a look at three of the Web sites listed in the
bibliography. I wouldn't accept any of these Web sites on a bibliography
for a middle school report.

Students are always asking me why they should believe books over what
they read on the Internet. I tell them that anybody can publish on the
Internet. I tell them that books go through a rigorous review process. I
tell them that I choose books based on reviews from skilled
professionals. It looks like the system failed us on this one.

My concern is that publishers are now hiring writers with the approach
to research that we are trying so hard to fight. This is clearly the
case for this book. Should I assume the same of all books published by
Rosen? Are other publishers as careless?

--Kathy Noble, Librarian Langston Hughes Middle School Reston, VA






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