Tag Archives: War

Deep Sea

51Jg2DdyHVL._SY344_BO1,204,203,200_Almost four years ago, Stephie, now nearly sixteen, and her eleven-year-old sister Nellie, were sent from Nazi-occupied Vienna to Sweden by their parents. She lives in the city on the mainland and attends school. Nellie lives on a remote island in the Goteborg archipelago with her foster parents. Stephie worries about her education, her sister, her faith, and her parents, who are in a concentration camp in Austria. Smoothly integrated into this delicate coming of age story are details about how neutral Sweden was affected by the war. The present tense, third-person narration gives the novel an unusual impact. This is the third installment in a quartet of books about Stephie’s experiences as a Jewish refugee in Sweden during World War II. The first, Faraway Island, won the 2010 Batchelder Award. The second, The Lily Pond, was a Batchelder Honor Book in 2012. mjw
Title: Deep Sea
Author: Annika Thor
Publisher
: Random House Children’s Books, Delacorte Press, New York
Copyright
: 2015
Original Language
: Swedish
Translator
: Linda Schenk
Original Title
: Havets djup
Original Publisher
: Bonnier Carlsen, Stockholm
Original Copyright
: 1998
ISBN
: 978-0-385-74385-3
Hardcover pages
: 229
Age range
: 12-16
Genre
: Historical fiction
Book setting
: Sweden
Author’s ethnicity
: Swedish
Author’s residence
: Stockholm, Sweden
Awards
: Author has won the Deutsche Jugendliteraturpries
Subjects
: Jews, Refugees, Sisters, Sweden, World War II

Branded By The Pink Triangle

branded by the pink triangleTen well-researched chapters describe how early 20th century tolerant attitudes toward homosexuals changed with the rise of Nazism in the 1930s. The pink triangle was used by the Nazis to identify homosexual prisoners in concentration camps. It has since been adopted by the gay movement as a symbol of strength and pride. First-person accounts from concentration camp survivors of the treatment and persecution of homosexuals by the Nazi regime, period photographs, a lengthy timeline, maps, and an extensive bibliography contribute to this well-documented history. The story of this little-known aspect of the holocaust is brought up to date with a final chapter titled, “It Gets Better.” mjw
Title: Branded By The Pink Triangle
Author: Ken Setterington
Publisher
: Second Story Press. Ontario, Canada
Copyright
: 2013
Original Language
: English
ISBN
: 978-1-926920-96-2
Paperback pages
: 157
Age range
: 12-16
Genre
: Information book, Nonfiction
Book setting
: Germany
Author’s ethnicity
: Canadian
Author’s residence
: Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Awards
: 2014 Stonewall Honor Book – ALA, 2014 USBBY Outstanding International Books, 2014 TD Canadian Children’s Literature Award finalist.
Subjects
: Atrocities, Berlin, Concentration camps, Gays, Homosexuals, Nazis, Persecution, World War II

Hidden: A Child’s Story of the Holocaust

HiddenIn this touching and powerful graphic novel told in flashbacks, Dounia tells her story to her granddaughter Elsa. At about age six, in Paris, Dounia found herself shunned by her teachers and classmates when she attended school wearing the yellow star, which identified her as Jewish. After police took her parents away in a scary nighttime raid, neighbors hid her from the Nazis in their apartment for as long as they could. She eventually was taken by Resistance workers to a farm in the French countryside, where she was protected by a loving family, and after the war ended, was reunited with her mother. Honest and direct words and full-color graphics mingle seamlessly to make this heart-breaking subject accessible to children. An Afterword explains that 84% of Jewish children living in France survived because of people who were willing to risk their own lives to hide and protect children from the Nazis and collaborating French police. mjw
Title: Hidden: A Child’s Story of the Holocaust
Author: Loic Dauvillier
Illustrator
: Marc Lizano,
Color: Greg Salsedo
Publisher
: First Second/Roaring Brook, New York
Copyright
: 2014
Original Language
: French
Translator
: Alexis Siegel
Original Title
: L’Enfant Cachee
Original Publisher
: Le Lombard
Original Copyright
: 2012
ISBN
: 978-1-59643-873-6
Hardcover pages
: 76
Age range
: 10 up
Genre
: Graphic novel, Historical fiction
Book setting
: Paris
Author’s ethnicity
: French
Author’s residence
: France
Illustrator’s ethnicity
: French
Illustrator’s residence
: France
Awards
: 2015 Mildred L. Batchelder Award = Older reader category, 2015 Sydney Taylor Award, 2015 NCSS Notable Social Studies Trade Books for Young People
Subjects
: Comics, Grandmothers, Graphic novels, Hidden children, Holocaust, Jewish, Multigenerational, Nazis, Paris

Vango: Between Sky and Earth

vango_coverIn 1934, a young man named Vango on the cusp of taking priestly vows is suddenly made a fugitive. Accused of murder, pursued by police and mysterious others, Vango finds that proving his innocence involves uncovering secrets from his past, taking him from Parisian rooftops to Mediterranean islands to Scottish forests in a hyper-coloured spy-thriller with a backwards-and-forwards timeline.  Part of the book’s charm involves historic figures turned into characters – like Hugo Eckener (commander of the Graf Zeppelin) who de Fombelle has written as a friend of Vango and as a quick-witted protester to Hitler’s increasing regime.  Snippets of story are also told from the perspective of a young girl who turns out to be Stalin’s daughter. These historic guess-who’s never felt clunky.  With a larger-than-life protagonist, Vango will appeal to lovers of daring escapades. The mystery to his identity unravels in the sequel, Vango, Book 2, A Prince Without A Kingdom, published in 2105. ew
Title: Vango: Between Sky and Earth
Author: Timothee de Fombelle
Publisher
: Candlewick Press.  Somerville, Massachusetts
Copyright
: 2014
Original language
: French
Translator
: Sarah Ardizzone
Original title
: Vango: Entre ciel et Terre
Original publisher
: Gallimard Jeunesse
Original copyright
: 2010
ISBN
: 978-0-7636-7196-9
Paperback pages
: 421
Age range
: 12 up
Genre
: Historical fiction
Book setting
: France, Germany, Mediterranean Islands, Russia, Scotland
Author’s ethnicity
: French
Author’s residence
: Paris, France
Awards
: Kirkus Reviews Best Teen Books of 2014,  2012 IBBY Honor List
Subjects
: Adventure, Fugitives, Identity, Mystery, Nazi, Priests, Voyages, World War II, Zeppelin

The End of the Line

The End of the LIneIt is 1942 in Amsterdam and five-year-old Jewish Beatrix is left on a tram when her mother is taken away by Nazi soldiers. She is saved when elderly ticket-taker Lars Gorter and his brother, Hans the conductor, claim that she is their niece. The two brothers have no idea how to take care of a child and they know that harboring a Jew could cost them their lives. They turn to their neighbors, Mrs. Vos and Lieve van der Meer, for help. The unlikely group becomes a family. They survive through the horrors of war, hunger and cold, bombings, fear, and anxiety. The book concludes with explanations of the characters’ futures after Holland’s liberation in 1945. It also includes a description of “When Strangers Were Saviors” and an Afterword that provides information about details of the war. Based on historical facts about World War II, this suspenseful short novel is written from the point of view of the two brothers, yet it will engage young readers. mjw
Title: The End of the Line
Author: Sharon E. McKay
Illustrator
: Serena Malyon
Publisher
: Annick Press, Toronto
Copyright
: 2014
Original Language
: English
ISBN
: 978-1-55451-658-2
Paperback pages
: 120
Age range
: 8-11
Genre
: Historical fiction
Book setting
: Amsterdam
Author’s ethnicity
: Canadian
Author’s residence
: Prince Edward Island, Canada
Awards
: 2015 USBBY Outstanding International Books Grades 6-8, 2008 First children’s author to be awarded the title of CFAP -Vet (War Artist), Canadian Forces (War) Artists Program
Subjects
: Amsterdam, Courage, Elderly, Holocaust, Jews, Netherlands, Prejudice, Survival, Tolerance, World War II

Dance of the Banished

dance of the banishedTeenagers Zeynep and Ali, who live in the village of Harput in Anatolia and plan to marry, are separated in June of 1913. Ali finds passage to Canada in search of a better life, but when World War I breaks out, he is declared an enemy alien and sent to an internment camp. Zeynep is left behind to work in a hospital, where she is faced with the horrors of war, revolution, and genocide. Each writes a journal for the other. Ali writes a chronicle of life in an internment camp in Kapuckasing, Ontario. Zeynep writes an eyewitness account of the Armenian genocide from the point of view of the Alevi Kurds. They are always in each other’s thoughts and are finally reunited in August of 1916. Based on true events, this well-researched story of love, hope, and tenacity to survive includes maps, an Author’s Note, and archival photographs of Kapuskasing Internment Camp, circa 1915. mjw
Title: Dance of the Banished
Author: Marsha Forchuk Skrypuch
Publisher
: Pajama Press, Canada
Copyright
: 2014
Original Language
: English
ISBN
: 978-1-927485-65-1
Paperback pages
: 234
Age range
: 12 up
Genre
: Historical fiction
Book setting
: Anatolia, Turkey; Canada
Author’s ethnicity
: Canadian and Ukrainian
Author’s residence
: Ontario, Canada
Awards
: 2008 Order of Princess Olha, Ukraine.  Appointed to Canada’s First World War Internment Recognition Endowment Council
Subjects
: Canadian history, Emigration, Immigration, Internment camps, Prejudice, Racism, World War I

Wanting Mor

wanting morJameela, a young Islamic girl who has a cleft lip, lives with her mother and father in a war-torn village in Afghanistan. When her beloved mother, Mor, dies suddenly, her father takes Jameela with him to Kabul to seek a new life. He turns to drugs and alcohol and marries a new wife who treats Jameela like a slave and urges him to abandon Jameela in Kabul’s busy marketplace. Through the kindness of strangers, Jameela is placed in an orphanage, where she goes to school, learns the power of an education, and has surgery on her deformed lip. This, together with her strong faith and memories of her mother, allows her to turn her life around. This touching story, rich in cultural content, is set in 2001 and is based on real incidents. The many Pushto and Arabic words in Jameela’s first-person narrative are explained in a helpful glossary. The author has a teaching guide and book talk/tutorial for this book on her website at http://www.rukhsanakhan.com mjw
Title: Wanting Mor
Author: Rukhsana Khan
Publisher
: Groundwood Books
Copyright
: 2010
Original Language
: English
ISBN
: 978-0-88899-862-0
Paperback pages
: 192
Age range
: 10-14
Genre
: Fiction
Book setting
: Kandahar, Kabul, Afghanistan
Author’s ethnicity
: Pakistani
Author’s residence
: Toronto, Canada
Awards
: 2009 Middle East Book Award, 2010 United States Board on Books for Young People (USBBY) Outstanding International Books List
Subjects
: Afghanistan, City and town life, Disabilities, Girls, Muslims, Orphanages, Taliban

The Children of the King

children of the kingJust prior to the London Blitz, siblings fourteen-year-old Jeremy and twelve-year-old Cecily, along with their mother, are being evacuated northwards to their Uncle Peregrine’s Lancastrian mansion. Jeremy is angry because he wants to stay in London with his father to help the war effort. Cecily is spoiled and selfish, but somewhat likable. On the way, they pick up a younger, lower-class evacuee named May Bright who is thoughtful, tough, and wise beyond her years. Author Sonya Hartnett is a master of magical realism and of telling a story within a story. After dinner, Uncle Peregrine tells a tale related to the nearby ruined Snow Castle where the children have encountered two brothers (ghosts?), dressed in velvet jackets, who speak of spies. The tale is recognizable as the story of Richard III and his nephews, the Princes in the Tower. This complex and introspective narrative is beautifully written and reminiscent of C.S. Lewis. mjw
Title: The Children of the King
Author: Sonya Hartnett
Publisher
: Candlewick Press, Somerville, Massachusetts
Copyright
: 2014
Original Language
: English
Original Publisher
: Penguin, Australia
Original Copyright
: 2012
ISBN
: 978-0-7636-6735-1
Hardcover pages
: 272
Age range
: 10 up
Genre
: Historical fiction
Book setting
: English Countryside, north of London
Author’s ethnicity
: Australian
Author’s residence
: Australia
Awards
: 2008 Astrid Lindgren Award
Subjects
: Adventure, Bravery, Death, Duty, England, Evacuation, Great Britain, Nobility, Power, World War II

Malala Yousafzai: Warrior With Words

malalaWhen the Taliban took control of the Swat Valley in Pakistan, fifteen-year-old Malala spoke out.  She began writing and speaking to everyone who would listen about her right to an education.  She wanted to prove that peaceful words have power over violence.  The Taliban responded by shooting her in the head as she sat in her school bus.  She recovered with no injury to her brain.  In 2012, she spoke at the United Nations on her sixteenth birthday and took her message – “Every child.  Every country.  Free school” – around the world.  The author highlights Malala’s bright personality, her favorite color pink, and her love of books.  Detailed cut-paper and photograph collage illustrations provide texture and color.  Back matter includes important facts about Pakistan, a map, Internet resources on Pakistan, and information about the Malala Fund, the United Nations Foundation’s Girl Up program, and other organizations where we can all work together to make girls’ education a true priority.  This is an inspiring book for kids, but older readers will want to read Malala’s own story in I Am Malala: The Girl Who Stood Up for Education and Was Shot by the Taliban, Little Brown and Company, 2013.  On November 10, 2014, Malala was awarded the Nobel Prize. mjw
Title: Malala Yousafzai: Warrior With Words
Author: Karen Leggett Abouraya
Illustrator
: L.C. Wheatley
Publisher
: Star Walk Kids Media, New York
Copyright
: 2014
Original Language
: English
ISBN
: 978-1-63083-316-9
Paperback pages
: 36
Age range
: 8-11
Genre
: Nonfiction picture book
Book setting
: Pakistan
Author’s ethnicity
: American
Author’s residence
: U.S.
Subjects
: Biography, Education, Girls, History, Muslim teenagers, Pakistan, Taliban

Marina

marinaIn May 1980, fifteen-year-old boarding school student Oscar Drai vanishes for a week after he meets the beautiful, ethereal Marina and her aged, portrait painter father, German Blau. Oscar and Marina walk to a hidden cemetery in the old Barcelona quarter where they witness a strange ritual. A woman, shrouded in black, places a rose on a grave marked with a black butterfly emblem. The complicated plot evolves as they try to solve this mystery. They unravel thirty years of macabre adventure and tragedy, involving post-WWII high society, a young diva, inventors, and tycoons in Barcelona’s underworld. An enjoyable part of the twisted gothic horror tale is the rich and flowing language describing Barcelona, but because of the disturbing paranormal elements, it is not the sort of book to read before bedtime. mjw
Title: Marina
Author: Carlos Ruiz Zafon
Publisher
: Little, Brown and Company
Copyright
: 2014
Original Language
: Spanish
Translator
: Lucia Graves
Original Title
: Marina
Original Publisher
: Edebe, Barcelona
Original Copyright
: 1999
ISBN
: 978-0-316-04471-4
Hardcover pages
: 326
Age range
: 12 up
Genre
: Fiction, Mystery
Book setting
: Barcelona, Spain
Author’s ethnicity
: Spanish
Author’s residence
: Spain and U.S.
Awards
: Author has won Spain’s Edebe Literary Prize for Young Adult Fiction
Subjects
: Barcelona, History, Mystery, Paranormal, Spain, Supernatural

Saving Kabul Corner

Saving Kabul Corner Book Cover12 year old Ariana Shinwali eagerly counts down the days until she will have her own room in a beautiful new house. Laila, Ariana’s perfect, well-mannered cousin,arrives from Afghanistan and seemingly intrudes on Ariana’s life: stealing her best friend, Mariam, and her personal space. Kabul Corner, the Shinwali family’s store, faces hardship when another Afghan grocery store competitor arises in Wong Plaza. An old family feud that supposedly was left in Afghanistan is reignited and the rival families blame each other for the vandalism and issues that take place at the two stores. Ariana, Laila, Mariam, and Wali (son of the rival store’s owner) set aside differences and meet to discuss suspicions about a third party being involved in the mishaps at each store. The mystery unfolds as the foursome uncover clues that point to the truth. A glossary of terms follows the compelling read which portrays the multicultural main characters in a manner that is not stereotypical.
cc
Title: Saving Kabul Corner
Author: N. H. Senzai
Publisher
: Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers, an imprint of Simon & Schuster Children’s Publishing Division
Copyright
: 2014
Original language
: English
ISBN
: 978-1-4424-8494-8
Hardcover pages
: 288
Age range
: 8-12
Genre
: Fiction
Book setting
: California
Author’s residence
: United States
Subjects
: Afghan Americans, California, Family life, Grocery trade, Immigrants, Mystery and detective stories, San Francisco Bay area, Vendetta

I Lived On Butterfly Hill

I Lived On Butterfly Hill Book Cover Celeste, an insightful, curious sixth-grader living in Valparaiso, Chile, leads an idyllic life. She is the daughter of two doctors, lives in a loving multigenerational household with her Nana Delfina, a nanny, and her Abuela Frida, goes to school with good friends, and is inspired by the things she sees outside her window on Butterfly Hill. Her world is turned upside down when Valparaiso begins to feel the tremors of rule by a ruthless dictator; these tremors are referred to as “earthquakes of the soul” by Celeste’s mother. Celeste’s parents go into hiding, her friends and neighbors begin to disappear without warning, and finally she flees to Juliette Cove in Maine to stay with her Tia Graciela. There she remains for over two years awaiting the news that the dictator has been overthrown. Finally she can return to her beloved homeland. Based on the dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet in the 1970s, this novel is full of imagery and poetic language. Watercolor, ink, and digital illustrations are sprinkled sparingly throughout this compelling novel that combines the author’s personal experience with history. cc
Title: I Lived On Butterfly Hill
Author: Marjorie Agosin
Illustrator
: Lee White
Publisher
: Antheneum Books for Young Readers, an imprint of Simon & Schuster Children’s Publishing Division, New York
Copyright
: 2014
Original language
: English
ISBN
: 978-1-4169-5344-9
Hardcover pages
: 454
Age range
: 10-14
Genre
: Historical fiction
Book setting
: Valparaiso, Chile; Maine, United States
Author’s ethnicity
: Chilean
Author’s residence
: Massachusetts, United States
Illustrator’s residence
: United States
Awards:  2015 Pura Belpre (Author) Award
Subjects
: Chile, Refugees, Separation, South America, Valparaiso