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WAR AND MILLIE MCGONIGLE

Accomplished storytelling transforms grim history into a light for dark times.

A San Diego tween nurses grievances as war approaches.

Since her best friend moved away and Gram, her biggest fan, died, Millie’s been preoccupied with death. In the lingering aftermath of the Depression, money is tight. While Pop looks for work, her cute but sickly 7-year-old sister, “Lily the pill,” hogs Mama’s attention while Pete, 5, demands Millie’s. Worse, annoying Cousin Edna’s moved into their two-bedroom house. In her notebook, Gram’s last gift, Millie sketches dead sea life she finds along Mission Beach’s sandy spit. Gram said nothing living dies if it’s remembered. Millie’s good at remembering. After Japan bombs Pearl Harbor and war is declared, Mama works nights building bombers; Pop works days as a Navy clerk. When darkness reigns sundown to sunrise, Millie—imaginative, funny, heartened by a new friendship—is the rock Lily and Pete depend on. If the particulars of Millie’s world are unfamiliar, readers will find broader parallels to the present, compellingly conveyed. As war reshapes their lives, some seek scapegoats to blame, but Millie’s Irish American family, with their own experiences of prejudice, rejects the anti-Japanese and anti-immigrant bias taking ugly root around them. Rich, authentic detail brings setting, community, and era to resonant life, as when a neighborhood child contracts polio and parents anxiously watch their own for symptoms. With the future uncertain, Millie discovers precious, hidden beauty lies in once-monotonous daily life.

Accomplished storytelling transforms grim history into a light for dark times. (author's note, note on research) (Historical fiction. 8-12)

Pub Date: April 6, 2021

ISBN: 978-1-984850-10-2

Page Count: 224

Publisher: Knopf

Review Posted Online: Jan. 25, 2021

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 15, 2021

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ALLIES

Both an excellent, inclusive narration of important historical events and a fast-paced, entertaining read.

Gratz (Refugee, 2017, etc.) weaves together fictionalized accounts of individual experiences of D-Day, the “beginning of the end of the Second World War.”

The action begins just before dawn on June 6, 1944, and ends near midnight that same day. Six different operations in settings across Europe, each fictionalized with imagined characters but based on true events, exemplify the ordinary people in extraordinary situations who risked or gave their lives to destroy what Gen. Eisenhower styled “the German war machine” and “Nazi tyranny.” The narrative moves from scene to scene as the day marches on—a sea invasion, French citizens and Resistance fighters on land, and soldiers arriving by air—but repeatedly returns to Dee, a German fighting on the American side and hiding his German identity from comrades like Sid, a Jewish American determined to wipe out the Germans even as he suffers insults from his peers. The vigorously diverse cast is historically accurate but unusual for a World War II novel, including a young Algerian woman, a white Canadian, a Cree First Nations lance corporal from Quebec, British soldiers, a black American medic, and a Frenchwoman. The horrors of war and the decisions and emotions it entails are presented with unflinching honesty through characters readers can feel for. In the end, all the threads come together to drive home the point that allies are “stronger together.”

Both an excellent, inclusive narration of important historical events and a fast-paced, entertaining read. (Historical fiction. 8-12)

Pub Date: Oct. 15, 2019

ISBN: 978-1-338-24572-1

Page Count: 336

Publisher: Scholastic

Review Posted Online: July 13, 2019

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 1, 2019

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COOKIES & MILK

From the Cookies & Milk series , Vol. 1

A wholesome story that bridges generations.

A boy improves his relationship with his father as they prepare to open a cookie store over summer break.

Dad has had a lot of ridiculous ideas, but to 11-year-old Ellis, opening a store that only sells chocolate chip cookies—even if they are delicious—seems to be the worst. With his parents recently divorced and his mother visiting her best friend out of town, Ellis dreads spending the summer of 1976 with his father. It only gets worse when they arrive at a run-down storefront. The next six weeks are all about perfecting their recipe, fixing up the shop, and attracting customers—when all he really wants is to play his harmonica and hang out with his best friend. Through Ellis’ first-person account, readers encounter several interesting characters on Sunset Boulevard as he explores his new neighborhood. One surprise is the existence of a mysterious paternal uncle that neither of his parents ever told him about, a discovery that sets Ellis on a course to reunite his family. Ellis learns not only the value of clear communication, but the importance of community as well. Readers will immediately love Ellis and his family as they learn to reconnect in this novel that is full of heart and humor. The easygoing pace and descriptive narration make it a suitable choice for reading aloud. Ellis and his family are Black. Final art not seen.

A wholesome story that bridges generations. (author's note, recipe, playlist) (Historical fiction. 8-12)

Pub Date: May 17, 2022

ISBN: 978-0-7595-5677-5

Page Count: 320

Publisher: Little, Brown

Review Posted Online: March 1, 2022

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 15, 2022

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