Jess Westmark’s father is in the military in Afghanistan, while she and her mother and sister are back on base in Florida. To feel closer to her father and to try to make a difference to the orphans of Afghanistan, Jess rounded up her two best friends and started a small charity called ‘Operation Oleander,’ to gather in-kind donations for the orphanage near where her father is stationed. Then the unthinkable happens; the taliban bombs the orphanage while Jess’ father and other soldiers are delivering the supplies, and there are injuries and fatalities. While Jess and her friends struggle with guilt and grief, emotions on the base run high, and the future of Operation Oleander is on the line.
What a lovely, heartbreaking and true book. I am not from a military family myself, so I can’t say for sure that this is an accurate depiction of that, but it sure feels like it from stories I’ve seen in the media about such families. Patterson sets up a really fraught situation where the ethics are realistically unclear, and everyone’s viewpoint has merit (except for the church members who protest the funeral of a soldier—I think it’s pretty clear that if anyone is going to hell, it would be them). This is a book that will really make kids think about right and wrong, good and bad, and how to help when help seems to bring down retribution and hatred.
In just writerly matters, the book is excellently structured and concise, and gets right to the point while still building the world with great detail. The characters are unique, flawed, and believable, including the secondary ones. Overall, a gem, with its only flaw being that not many kids would choose to pick it up of their own accord.