I've been keeping this blog all through the World War One centenary commemorations. I had no idea there were so many children's books about war and there are many more I could review, both contemporary and from the past. These books are wise, thoughtful, exciting, moving, often very sad; their heroes and heroines are brave, scared, courageous, resourceful and inspiring.
I have loved reading them. But Armistice Day 2018 seems like a good time to draw this project to a close. It is wonderful to read about the many joyful projects being planned to mark the centenary of the end of World War One.
And this is my own project, due out in March 2019.
Sunday, 11 November 2018
Sunday, 24 June 2018
My grandfather’s war by Glyn Harper, illustrated by Jenny Cooper
My grandfather’s war by Glyn Harper, illustrated by Jenny Cooper (EK Books, 2018)
32 pages
with full page colour illustrations (hardback edition)
Subjects:
Vietnam, grandparents, veterans, picture books (Year 3-4)
Synopsis
My
Grandfather’s War tells the story of 8-year-old Sarah and her grandfather
Robert, who lives with her family and looks after her before and after school.
The pair have a close relationship and Sarah is sensitive to her grandfather’s
occasional spells of sadness. The family doesn’t talk about these, except to
tell Sarah that he is thinking about a war in a place called Vietnam.
When Sarah
summons up her courage to ask her grandfather why he feels sad, he tells her
about his time in Vietnam. The flashbacks of his memory present images of a war
which was “not like other wars” and he also tells Sarah about the difficulties
the troops faced when they returned home, from anti-war protesters and the
after-effects of chemicals.
This is a reworked version of an
earlier book, now with the added magic of Glyn Harper’s collaboration with
Jenny Cooper, whose illustrations show the warm bond between grandfather and
grandchild.
Another thing I really liked about
this book is how it models (to both children and adults) how to handle difficult
conversations. Sarah is nervous about asking her question but summons up the
courage to do so because she loves her grandfather. She tells him that she’s
scared and he acknowledges that with a serious, concerned expression (that
picture is one of my favourites). Her grandfather doesn’t fob her off and
answers carefully but truthfully. The conversation doesn’t make his sadness go
away but now Sarah understands it better.
Reviews
Kids book reviews calls it "the perfect mix of narrative and history" and "a gentle educational tool, highly recommended" for classrooms.
Teacher
notes are available here and include some thoughtful comments from Jenny about how she approaches the
subject of war as an illustrator.
Author’s website
Glyn Harper is Professor of War Studies at Massey University in
Palmerston North, New Zealand. He is Massey's Project Manager of the Centenary
History of New Zealand and the First World War. A former teacher, he joined the
Australian Army in 1988 and after eight years transferred to the New Zealand
Army, where he rose to the rank of lieutenant colonel. Glyn was the army's
official historian for the deployment to East Timor and is the author of
numerous history books. (From the Penguin website)
Info about the illustrator
Jenny
Cooper is a wonderful artist who has illustrated more than 70 children’s books.
Read more about her on the Book Council site or Christchurch City libraries or Storylines.
Other books you might like
This is the
sixth book that Glyn Harper and Jenny Cooper have worked on together. Their
previous titles are Roly the Anzac donkey,
Jim’s letters, Le Quesnoy: the story of the town New Zealand saved, Gladys goes to war and Bobby the littlest war hero.
There aren’t many books for young readers about
Vietnam. Memorial by Gary Crew and Lest we forget by Feana Tu’akoi both
touch on it. Other books are Vietnam diary by Mark Wilson and I
was only nineteen by John Schumann.
Books about
the grandfather-grandchild relationship include Grandad’s medals by Tracy Duncan.
Have you read it?
Have you
read this book? Let me know what you think!
Monday, 4 June 2018
Top 100 Children’s Book Blogs and Websites for Parents, Teachers and Kids
Very pleased to announce that my Children's war books blog is now included in this list of Top 100 Children’s Book Blogs and Websites for Parents, Teachers and Kids. Lots of other great blogs on there as well.
Tuesday, 29 May 2018
Enemy camp by David Hill
Enemy camp by David
Hill (Puffin, 2016)
260 pages (in diary format)
Subjects: World War Two, New Zealand, Japan, Prisoners of war, young adult fiction (Year 7-10)
260 pages (in diary format)
Subjects: World War Two, New Zealand, Japan, Prisoners of war, young adult fiction (Year 7-10)
Synopsis
“When of hundreds of
Japanese captives arrive at Featherston POW camp, the tiny town is divided.
Tensions run high and then, on 25 February 1943, disaster strikes. Three boys
witness it all.” (Publisher’s blurb)
Ewen lives in the
small town of Featherson, where his father works as a guard at the POW camp.
His diary covers the months between October 1942 and February 1943 and
describes everyday life in wartime, school, the summer holidays, the attitudes
of local people to the Japanese and the gradually increasing tension between
some of the prisoners and guards. Together with his best friend Barry and
Barry’s younger (polio-affected) brother Clarry, Ewen starts taking Japanese
lessons from one of the officers, and this provides a great way to show a
positive side of Japanese life and culture that many of the townsfolk have no
idea of.
David Hill skilfully
builds in many other aspects of 1940s life: the ever-present fear of polio, food
shortages, barbed wire on the beaches, the blackout, the Home Guard, American
GIs handing out sticks of gum, practice air raids, school milk, ink wells,
picnics, the movies and dances. He has a wonderful way of capturing a
12-year-old boy’s voice, in Ewen’s remarks on the progress of the war (“So
yeah, we’re going to win”) as well as the progress of his friendship with
“snobby Susan Proctor” (“And – I’m still trying to believe this – I spent most
of the time talking to Susan Proctor”).
It’s also a
refreshing change to read about a boy who reads and likes writing, and wants to
be an author when he grows up, and about a warm and close, even if
undemonstrative, father-son relationship.
Reviews:
Bobs book blog says: "Superbly
written in short diary entries that primary and intermediate students can
easily read, coupled with David Hill’s easy style and you have great historical
fiction. The account of the event itself with the boys looking on is
sensitively done. A very readable novel."
Another review by Siobhan Harvey calls it "both an enjoyable read and an imperceptible history lesson" and notes that "importantly, Hill personalises the demonised foe, allowing young readers to see Japanese captives as much victims of war as anyone fighting on the Allied side."
About the author
Another review by Siobhan Harvey calls it "both an enjoyable read and an imperceptible history lesson" and notes that "importantly, Hill personalises the demonised foe, allowing young readers to see Japanese captives as much victims of war as anyone fighting on the Allied side."
About the author
David Hill is one of NZ’s best loved authors for young people. Here is an article in which he talks about the book:
"I'm not preaching any themes. I want them to have a story first. I hope they like the people, especially Ewen the young protagonist. If they see attitudes that they agree with and some they disagree with I'll be very happy with that."
There's another interview here on Radio NZ. I also enjoyed this interview and David Hill's comments about writing about war ("War is wonderful to write about because it involves conflict - physical, mental and internal") and why he likes writing for and about this age group ("because they're coming across ideas and experiences for the first time. They're surprisingly sophisticated, they have a good vocabulary and understand a lot. They're a lovely mixture between naivety and sophistication.")
"I'm not preaching any themes. I want them to have a story first. I hope they like the people, especially Ewen the young protagonist. If they see attitudes that they agree with and some they disagree with I'll be very happy with that."
There's another interview here on Radio NZ. I also enjoyed this interview and David Hill's comments about writing about war ("War is wonderful to write about because it involves conflict - physical, mental and internal") and why he likes writing for and about this age group ("because they're coming across ideas and experiences for the first time. They're surprisingly sophisticated, they have a good vocabulary and understand a lot. They're a lovely mixture between naivety and sophistication.")
Links
You can
read more about the “Featherston incident" here.
And if you
are ever driving on SH 2 between Featherston and Greytown, look out for the
roadside memorial to the POW site.
Have you read it?
Have you
read this book? Let me know what you think!
Monday, 23 April 2018
The red poppy by David Hill, illustrated by Fifi Colston
The red poppy by David
Hill, illustrated by Fifi Colston (Scholastic, 2012)
Also
published in te reo as Te Popi Whero.
Subjects:
World War One, France, poppy, dogs, animals, picture books (Year 3-6)
Synopsis
Jim McLeod is a young soldier
like any other, waiting in the trenches as the time of attack draws nearer.
Nipper is a stray dog, found in an abandoned French village, whom the soldiers have trained to
act as a messenger dog, carrying messages in a leather bag around his neck (and
he was a good rat-killer as well).
The only patch of colour is a
cluster of poppies amidst the grey mud. Jim, an "enemy" German soldier
and Nipper are about to see their paths meet - and the poppies have a role to
play as well.
There's a CD at the back of the
book (and
lyrics on the back page) featuring
an original song (Little red poppy) written
by Canadian musician Rob Kennedy and performed by Giselle Sanderson. (David Hill says in
the acknowledgements that the song "started everything off".) Little red poppy has now been sung at
commemoration services around the world and you can listen to it here on You tube.
You can also listen to The red poppy on Radio NZ's Treasure chest.
Reviews:
My bestfriends are books interviews David
and Fifi about family history, writing this book and what it meant to them.
Kids' book review calls it "a breathtaking and
deeply moving book. It’s about a man, a war, and the basic concepts of
humankind. It’s about a dog, an unlikely friendship and the iconic red poppy
used to commemorate our fallen".
You can
find teacher notes from Scholastic here.
About the author:
David Hill
is one of New Zealand's best (and best loved) writers for children and young
adults. You can read more about him on
the NZ Book Council site or the Christchurch City libraries site.
His
other books with a war theme include Enemy
camp and Flight path. (Interestingly, he says in this newspaper interview that he started writing war
stories because "it became embarrassing
for an "old guy" to try and write contemporary teenage
slang ".)
About the illustrator:
Fifi
Colston has a great website with this page about her children's book
illustration (including The red poppy).
Other books you might like:
Caesar the Anzac dog and The Anzac puppy are both stories about dogs in World War One.
Links
Dogs were
used for many different purposes in World War One (there was even a War Dog School Of Instruction). This article has some interesting facts
about "four-legged fighters".
This one
has a picture of a dog wearing a gas mask.
Have you read it?
Have you read this book? Let me know what you
think!
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