by Caroline Pignat ‧ RELEASE DATE: May 16, 2009
Fourteen-year-old Kathleen (“Kit”) Byrne relates a first-person account of life during the Great Hunger of 1845-50 in Ireland. Living with her mother, father and two younger siblings, she works as a scullery maid at the manor of Lord Fraser until the devastating potato blight reaches County Wicklow and swiftly erodes her family’s marginal ability to survive. Aided by Lizzie, a wise woman with a touch of second sight, Kit matures into her family’s only provider. Pushed by the rapidly deteriorating situation, she makes a poor—and rather surprising—choice to try to stop Fraser’s brutal overseer from evicting her family, a somewhat implausible plot device that seems designed only to add suspense. Although the author weaves in many of the horrific details of the famine, she less effectively captures the voices of its victims. Dialogue in a modified dialect does not ring quite true, and Kit seems oversophisticated for her impoverished, uneducated background. Other characters are not fully developed. Purchase for audiences that enjoyed the much better Nory Ryan’s Song by Patricia Reilly Giff (2000). (historical note) (Historical fiction. 11-14)
Pub Date: May 16, 2009
ISBN: 978-0-88995-402-1
Page Count: 278
Publisher: Red Deer Press
Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 15, 2009
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by Michael Morpurgo ‧ RELEASE DATE: Oct. 1, 2004
From England’s Children’s Laureate, a searing WWI-era tale of a close extended family repeatedly struck by adversity and injustice. On vigil in the trenches, 17-year-old Thomas Peaceful looks back at a childhood marked by guilt over his father’s death, anger at the shabby treatment his strong-minded mother receives from the local squire and others—and deep devotion to her, to his brain-damaged brother Big Joe, and especially to his other older brother Charlie, whom he has followed into the army by lying about his age. Weaving telling incidents together, Morpurgo surrounds the Peacefuls with mean-spirited people at home, and devastating wartime experiences on the front, ultimately setting readers up for a final travesty following Charlie’s refusal of an order to abandon his badly wounded brother. Themes and small-town class issues here may find some resonance on this side of the pond, but the particular cultural and historical context will distance the story from American readers—particularly as the pace is deliberate, and the author’s hints about where it’s all heading are too rare and subtle to create much suspense. (Fiction. 11-13, adult)
Pub Date: Oct. 1, 2004
ISBN: 0-439-63648-5
Page Count: 208
Publisher: Scholastic
Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 15, 2004
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by Jane Yolen ‧ RELEASE DATE: March 6, 2018
Stands out neither as a folk-tale retelling, a coming-of-age story, nor a Holocaust novel.
A Holocaust tale with a thin “Hansel and Gretel” veneer from the author of The Devil’s Arithmetic (1988).
Chaim and Gittel, 14-year-old twins, live with their parents in the Lodz ghetto, forced from their comfortable country home by the Nazis. The siblings are close, sharing a sign-based twin language; Chaim stutters and communicates primarily with his sister. Though slowly starving, they make the best of things with their beloved parents, although it’s more difficult once they must share their tiny flat with an unpleasant interfaith couple and their Mischling (half-Jewish) children. When the family hears of their impending “wedding invitation”—the ghetto idiom for a forthcoming order for transport—they plan a dangerous escape. Their journey is difficult, and one by one, the adults vanish. Ultimately the children end up in a fictional child labor camp, making ammunition for the German war effort. Their story effectively evokes the dehumanizing nature of unremitting silence. Nevertheless, the dense, distancing narrative (told in a third-person contemporaneous narration focused through Chaim with interspersed snippets from Gittel’s several-decades-later perspective) has several consistency problems, mostly regarding the relative religiosity of this nominally secular family. One theme seems to be frustration with those who didn’t fight back against overwhelming odds, which makes for a confusing judgment on the suffering child protagonists.
Stands out neither as a folk-tale retelling, a coming-of-age story, nor a Holocaust novel. (author’s note) (Historical fiction. 12-14)Pub Date: March 6, 2018
ISBN: 978-0-399-25778-0
Page Count: 432
Publisher: Philomel
Review Posted Online: Dec. 20, 2017
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 15, 2018
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