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Playmakers: The Jewish Entrepreneurs Who Created the Toy Industry in America

Playmakers: The Jewish Entrepreneurs Who Created the Toy Industry in America

by Michael Kimmel

W. W. Norton & Company ·2026 ·432 pages
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Near the Top

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About This Book

A unique, illuminating story of the first–generation Jewish American toymakers who literally manufactured "the century of the child." In 1902, Morris and Rose Michtom invented the Teddy Bear in the back room of their Brooklyn candy store. Together, they launched the Ideal Toy Corporation into a prewar market rife with other first–generation American Jewish the Hassenfield brothers of Hasbro, Ruth Moskowicz and Elliot Handler of Mattel, and Joshua Lionel Cowan of Lionel Trains. In Playmakers, Michael Kimmel documents the creation of the idealized American childhood in the twentieth century—an idea developed but not experienced by its creators, whose parents often were poor immigrants from Eastern Europe. From Barbie and G.I. Joe to Popeye, Superman, and Mr. Potato Head, Kimmel follows Jewish toymakers as they climbed the ladder of success alongside Jewish comic book creators, children's authors, parenting experts, and child psychologists. Playmakers shows how the overlapping experiences of being a Jew and a child in twentieth–century America—an outsider looking in, a person desperate to be accepted—created childhood as we know it today.


Reviews

"An enlightening social history of how Jewish family businesses created America's most iconic playthings."

Kirkus Read review ↗ Near the Top

"Kimmel's tone is celebratory as much as exploratory, arguing that Jews were uniquely positioned to thrive in American toy entrepreneurship ..."

Alexandra Jacobs· The New York Times Read review ↗ Near the Top

"He blurs his focus to cover the well-trodden territory of the comics business and the Jewish artists who channelled their acute sense of outsider status into creating characters like Clark Kent."

Alexandra Schwartz· The New Yorker Read review ↗ Bottom of the Pile

"Kimmel is straining to bend the facts to his interpretation."

Barbara Spindel· The Wall Street Journal Bottom of the Pile

"Exuberantly researched and written ..."

Heller McAlpin· The Christian Science Monitor Read review ↗ Near the Top

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