World War II was more than military campaigns fought overseas. For those living in the States the War was a time of shortages, rationing and Victory Gardens.
No matter how well equipped an army is, it will fail without food. That was the rationale behind food rationing. Citizens were encouraged to grow some of their own food in Victory gardens. But this town's Victory gardens spawned a tomato rivalry and a class project.
The school has challenged their students to raise money to buy War Bonds. This class needs a project. When a man is injured and unable to tend his large Victory garden, the class takes it on selling the produce for money to buy War Bonds. Then there is that tomato tasting contest with a bond as a prize egging the class on to grow the best tomato in town.
The book brings out the effects of shortages, men going to war some never to return and what it means to be a neighbor. It is true to the time and small town life of Kansas during the War.
The children are interesting. Each has more to think about than just working in a garden. They have families. One has a father fighting somewhere.
The townspeople are sometimes supportive, sometimes grumpy, sometimes seeming mean. The children must deal with all of them.
This book is a good introduction to a time when war affected not a few families but every family in the country. It reflects a time when the country was united in the goal of winning a war, when everyone was willing and did sacrifice during their daily lives to help those fighting.