Lily's Hong Kong Honey Cake
Erica Lyons author Bonnie Pang illustrator
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Behrman House Inc.,U.S.
Published:2nd Sep '25
£14.99
Supplier delay - available to order, but may take longer than usual.

STARRED REVIEW: "A first purchase for libraries building collections around Jewish history, refugee experiences, and stories of resilience for young readers."—School Library Journal
"Highly recommended" —The Jewish Book Council
"An enjoyable, inspiring story"—The Historical Novel Society
Based on the history of Jewish refugees in Asia and spanning multiple years during World War II, this picture book shows how some creativity, adaptability, and a lot of love can make the new year sweet no matter where you are.
Lily's family ran a pastry shop in Vienna. Every Rosh Hashanah, they baked honey cakes for their customers. But when war comes, they must leave everything behind. They first travel to Shanghai, where they are able to open a new bakery. Each year, Lily learned more about baking. She helped to mix and pour the batter, measure the ingredients, and passed out the wrapped up treats. But each year, there are changes. When the flour runs out, they have to use rice instead. There were fewer customers, and the newspaper wrappings were showing bad news.
Soon, Lily's family has to move again, to Hong Kong. With rations there was even less than usual. There would be no honey cake this year. But Lily had been watching how her parents had made do in the years before, and she had some ideas of her own. Because despite all the changes, everyone deserves to have a sweet new year.
"Lily’s Hong Kong Honey Cake is a captivating tale weaving together resilience, community, and the power of tradition. It offers young readers a valuable lesson in Jewish history that should never be forgotten."
—Abby Lester, Director of the Global Archives of the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee (JDC)
"When Lily is three, she and her family leave Austria and their bakery because of harassment against Jews. They eat their honey cakes on a ship. In 1940, when she is four, and for several more years, Lily celebrates Rosh Hashanah at their new bakery in Shanghai with honey cakes. At age eight, there is little food and no cake. When Lily is nine, the family leaves Shanghai for Hong Kong, where they live in a crowded hotel as refugees. At ten, on Rosh Hashanah, Lily helps the hotel chef make honey cakes, even without honey.
Full-page spreads show each year of Lily’s early life, on Rosh Hashanah. The language and content are repetitive in word or concept—cleverly done, showing that even when things change, some things remain the same. The war and deprivation are hinted at, but the bright colors show the hope and love of Lily’s family. End pages include a map of the fictional Lily’s journey, and detailed information about the Jewish diaspora to Asia. An enjoyable, inspiring story. Ages 3-8."
—The Historical Novel Society
"Set amidst the lesser-known history of Jewish refugees’ experiences in Shanghai and Hong Kong during and after the Second World War, Lily’s Hong Kong Honey Cake is a sweet illustration of Jewish tradition, community spirit and human resilience during difficult times, gently inspiring hope and strength. A cozy and heartwarming read."
—Fanny Lu, Executive Director of The Hong Kong Heritage Project
"In 1937 Vienna, Lily’s family runs a bakery, filling pink-ribboned boxes with honey cakes for Rosh Hashanah. As war spreads across Europe, they are forced to close their shop and flee, setting sail for Shanghai, a haven for Jewish refugees. There, the family rebuilds their traditions in a new neighborhood, learning Chinese phrases, sharing food, and celebrating holidays with neighbors despite hardship. Bakery boxes once tied with satin ribbons become twine-wrapped brown paper, then goods wrapped in newspapers filled with images of war, reflecting their changing circumstances. In 1946, the family temporarily relocates to Hong Kong, where food shortages mean no honey cake for Rosh Hashanah. Longing for the taste of home, Lily finds the courage to ask the help of a hotel chef, and together they bake a makeshift honey cake to share with other refugees. “The honey cake tasted like home because they were together.” Themes of displacement, cultural integration, and the power of tradition are seamlessly woven throughout this moving, accessible narrative, offering young readers a gentle entry point into refugee experiences. Comic-style illustrations feature soft textures and layered shadows, centering characters while signaling shifts in setting through clothing and details. A muted palette mirrors themes of resilience and adaptation, with warm tones highlighting moments of community and hope. Back matter features a historical note, photographs, a map, and a glossary, enriching the title’s usefulness for classrooms and family discussions. VERDICT A first purchase for libraries building collections around Jewish history, refugee experiences, and stories of resilience for young readers."
—School Library Journal Starred Review
"Erica Lyons and Bonnie Pang’s new picture book presents young readers with a little-known part of Jewish history. When Nazi oppression descended on Europe’s Jews, some found a temporary refuge in Shanghai. Lily’s Hong Kong Honey Cake includes information about this process in an afterword. The story itself focuses on one fictional child and her family, who abandon their home and bakery in Vienna, traveling far away to an unfamiliar land and culture. As conditions in China worsen, their Rosh Hashanah celebrations become more diminished by poverty. Yet, with each year of their exile, Lily’s mother reinforces the sweetness of their traditions. Warm images of family life emphasize how Jewish culture was able to take root under the most adverse circumstances.
The book opens with Lily’s mother managing her business while keeping her baby girl at her side in a bassinet. Combining the elegance of pastries “wrapped in pink paper, delicate like a butterfly’s wings,” with the support of their whole community, the bakery embodies an idyllic atmosphere before everything changes. Lily’s excitement about the upcoming move contrasts with the despair of adults, which is initially hidden. Her mother feeds her honey cake onboard the ship for China, repeating her reassuring phrase, “For a sweet year, my sweet one.” Pang’s illustrations evoke the family’s enthusiasm about offering their products to welcoming neighbors. Store signs in Chinese and the noodle shop next door may seem exotic, but the customers who line up for honey cake aren’t very different from those they knew in Vienna. The cake’s sweetness melds with “smoke from the neighbor’s incense,” as they gather together, listening to Papa’s nostalgic stories.
An ugly reality encroaches on each ensuing New Year in Shanghai. Lyons’s subtle selection of details allows young readers to glimpse a world at war. Rice substitutes for flour and the newspapers wrapping their cakes are “filled with pictures of war.” By Lily’s eighth celebration of Rosh Hashanah, the honey cake has disappeared entirely. But the war ends, and a two-page spread depicting the family’s voyage by ship to Hong Kong is an iconic image of emigration and hope. Observing the holiday in a formerly grand hotel, the Jewish refugees have access to a Torah and prayer books. What more would they need? Lily’s now engrained habit of adaptiveness leads her to take a bold step. She approaches the hotel’s kitchen staff, and, with the essential ingredients of their kindness and empathy, the honey cake returns.
Lily’s Hong Kong Honey Cake is highly recommended and includes an afterword, a glossary, and a map."
—Jewish Book Council
- Winner of AJL Holiday HIghlights 2025 (United States)
ISBN: 9781681156767
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
32 pages