What do you think?
Rate this book


368 pages, Hardcover
First published May 10, 2022
Mama didn't speak for a moment. "Evil is only as powerful as we let it be..."This was a realistic treatment of a boy's experience with life in the US during WWII. I appreciated mentions of sugar rationing, collecting scrap metal for the war effort, families sending off, and sometimes dealing with the war deaths, of their sons. The conversations and vocabulary sounded largely as they would have in the 1940s, although I was thrown off several times by Danny's use of the word "graffiti" as it wasn't then in common use to describe the kind of vandalism he witnesses. Time shifts are handled very well, with the earlier narrative printed in italics on grey-coloured pages. Young readers of this book receive a short but succinct explanation of anti-Semitism and genocide in Europe, along with graphic examples of racism and land appropriation in the US. Reading about Jordan's experiences with the librarian from hell, I was reminded of the story of astronaut Ronald McNair (who, as a Black child, was denied access to a library that's now named after him.) Children of 2022 need to know about these things, that the real evil we all face is thinking that "it's not our problem." I loved the realistic way Danny learns and grows from observing the little town he's growing up in, and appreciate the open-ended aspect of the ending. 4 stars.