Heiligman is really good at writing YA nonfiction! This is shown by the numerous awards her books have won over the years. The secret seems to be that she really gets personally inside her research. For example, this book has a photo of the author with Sonia Beach Williams in the Church that Sonia, one of the few children survivors, got married in. She also credits Mrs. Williams with the philosophical comment that she kept cheerful because “I was torpedoed. I am resilient.” (p. 272). Heiligman made certain to show the people as three dimensional figures by noting that the captain of the U-boat had a mental collapse when he found out that he had torpedoed a boat filled with children.
This was a complicated recounting, with many moving parts and stories of individuals to trace. Sometimes it was a bit hard to keep track of the various people involved. However, I don’t see how anyone else could have done a better job. The story was a multifaceted one. For that reason, I appreciated the list of who was who in the front of the book. If only for the concern she expressed at least 3 different times for the lack of information about the Lascars, Indian (India) men who made up a large part of the crew, this book deserves 5 stars. I hope she gets her wish and can write a new edition with more information about the “invisible” lascars! While she didn’t make a big deal about it, many children who did survive were from the paying (likely if not well to do, certainly richer than the typical CORB (Children Overseas Reception Board) child. They often had warmer clothes on and were better nourished to begin with, both of which were vital elements among those who survived. Another item that jumped out to me as an adult, not the audience for this YA book, was that not one person threatened to sue the CORB group. Some of this was the times, who sued in the middle of war? Another part was the national character: parents wrote to the CORB, asking for little mementos of their loss, and the CORB people genuinely tried to fill their request. One child’s parents asked if a wreath could be placed on the spot and the answer was that it was impossible since no one would know a ship’s route till it left because of wartime secrecy and ended kindly with advising them to consider the entire ocean a marker for their child’s memory. We Americans would be so worried about lawsuits that the kindness and empathy would have been skipped. Maybe someday we can regain the kind part of our national character. Highly recommended for true adventure stories; history on a small, tragic part of WWII; boat stories; and true stories with children as the initiators of much of the action.