Summer of my German soldier by Bette Greene (Puffin Books, 2006; first published The Dial Press,
1973)
ISBN 0 14
240651 1
21
chapters; 230 pages
Subjects:
World War Two, United States, Jews, Germans, Prisoners of war, young adult (Year 8-10)
Synopsis
This book won ALA Notable Book along with New York Times Book of the Year (1973); it was a National Book Award Finalist and was made into a movie in 1978. I read it for the first time for this blog in this Puffin modern classics edition, which makes it yet another modem children's classic that has somehow passed me by until now.
(From the Puffin page)”When her small hometown in Arkansas becomes the
site of a camp housing German prisoners during World War II, 12-year-old Patty
Bergen learns what it means to open her heart. Although she's Jewish, she
begins to see a prison escapee, Anton, not as a Nazi--but as a lonely, frightened
young man with feelings not unlike her own, who understands and appreciates her
in a way her parents never will. And Patty is willing to risk losing family,
friends--even her freedom--for what has quickly become the most important part
of her life. Thoughtful, moving, and hard-hitting, Summer of My German Soldier has become a modern classic.”
There are different covers on different editions. I can’t say I like this cover, though.
Patty (or Patricia
Anne) has a wild imagination, wistful daydreams and a huge vocabulary gleaned from
reading the dictionary. “I don’t actually mean to be rude,
but I am. My father says I ask a lot of questions and then go around
contradicting every answer.”
She sometimes seems much
younger than 12 and sometimes much older, but I love the way she talks and
thinks. And I’m in awe of how the story
is told completely from Patty’s point of view, but the author shows us so
clearly the things that she doesn’t notice or can’t understand.
Patty’s mother is distant, her
little sister Sharon is too young to provide any support and her father is a
tortured soul, but we lose sympathy for him when he is physically abusive. The beatings that he deals out are hard to read about
and it’s sad to see Patty’s desperate attempts to win her parents' love and
affection, which is so freely given to Sharon. Her family life is made bearable by occasional visits to her grandparents and by Ruth, their cook,
who calls her “Honey Babe” and is “the colour of hot chocolate before the
marshmallow bleeds in.”
Her life changes the day that Anon
Reiker walks into her father’s shop, and the place where she is sent to live at the end
would be awful, if not for the fact that her home life is so sad anyway.
In some ways, it’s an escape. And she has Anton’s words to hold onto: “Even if you forget everything else
I want you to always remember that you are a person of value, and you have a
friend who loved you enough to give you his most valued possession.”
Reviews:
This review calls the book "a poignant coming-of-age story about a young Jewish girl from a small town in Arkansas who helps an escaped German POW, an act which changes her life forever."
This review calls the book "a poignant coming-of-age story about a young Jewish girl from a small town in Arkansas who helps an escaped German POW, an act which changes her life forever."
Apparently
there is a sequel, Morning is a long time coming, but I don’t know if I want to read
that. I think I’d rather imagine Patty’s
future for myself.
Author’s website
(From the
back page) “Bette Greene was born in Memphis, Tennessee on June 28, 1934 and
grew up in a small town in Arkansas.” That makes her just a bit younger in
World War Two than Patty, age 12, living in Jenkinsville Arkansas. “In many
ways, Patty Bergen is based on Ms Greene’s childhood experiences as a Jewish
girl in the South.”
You can read more about Bette Green on her website.
Other books you might like:
So far from the sea by Eve Bunting describes the camps in picture book format. We follow Laura and her little brother Thomas, who are visiting their grandfather's grave in a remote part of the desert. Gradually we learn that their grandparents and their father, as a small boy, were among the
thousands of Americans with a Japanese background who were taken to internment
camps in World War Two.
Things I didn’t know
I first
read about the Japanese interns in So far from the sea, but I had
no idea there were so many Prisoner of War camps in America. Like so
many other things, it makes sense when you think about it. The German POW camps
were in Germany or in German-occupied countries, but for the Allies to set up
their own POW camps in England or Europe would use up food and medical
resources that they needed for their own troops.
Across the Atlantic, America
had masses of food and acres of empty space - and that’s where the POWs went;
nearly 425,000 of them, housed in more than 500 camps. Nearly 23,000 of them – German and Italian –
went to Arkansas, where this book is set.
Not many of
them escaped, or even tried to. The camps were set in remote locations –
and it wasn’t as if they could ever get back home, across the ocean. They
had comfortable surroundings and plenty of food; in fact some Americans felt
the military was “coddling” them. The camps were closed down after the war and
the prisoners were returned to Europe.
You can read more about them here and here.
You can read more about them here and here.
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