sholio: Chess queen looking horrified (Chess piece oh noes)
Sholio ([personal profile] sholio) wrote2019-03-04 09:51 pm

Not a Newbery book, but it might as well be

(In reference to the frequent depressingness of Newbery books for kids.)

This book was one of my many used-bookstore acquisitions from Tucson, which I read on the plane coming home. I would like to preface this by saying that I really did enjoy the book and it was an entertaining airplane read. However, it really was not what I was expecting, to an almost hilarious degree.

Let me begin by showing you the front cover and back cover copy, which was all I knew about it going in.




Sounds cute and fun! Kids heartwarmingly make friends with an elderly hermit and rescue whales!

While technically these things do appear in the book, the back cover leaves out a few things. Like, say, 90% of the book.

Spoiler-ish poll under the cut.



Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 61


Guess what this book is actually about! (Check all that apply; at least 2 of these are true.)

View Answers

The 10-year-old heroine dying of cancer.
8 (13.1%)

The heroine and her mother's slide into poverty, widowhood, and starvation after her dad enlists in WWI.
39 (63.9%)

The heroine dealing with the drowning death of her same-age best friend.
38 (62.3%)

The heroine heartwarmingly making friends with an elderly hermit who then kills himself.
46 (75.4%)

The narwhals on the cover:

View Answers

are metaphorical; they're a metaphor for war and man's inhumanity to man.
2 (3.3%)

exist, but are brutally massacred by the villagers for their horns until the beach is running with blood.
9 (14.8%)

At least some of both A and B.
50 (82.0%)

This book also includes:

View Answers

Descriptions of starving villagers having to eat their pet dogs to survive.
1 (1.7%)

Teenagers attempting to murder a harmless elderly man because they think he's a German spy.
10 (16.7%)

The heroine accidentally faking her own death and convincing her recently widowed mother that she's just lost her daughter too.
0 (0.0%)

All of the above.
49 (81.7%)




It actually is not a particularly depressing book, all the above aside; it is, on the whole, a fairly optimistic book. It's just not the book I was expecting.

ETA: Extensive book spoilers in comments, btw.
sovay: (I Claudius)

[personal profile] sovay 2019-03-05 08:01 am (UTC)(link)
starting with how most of it is about the characters coping with WWI, which isn't even hinted at in the back cover copy.

I noticed that! You'd think most historical novels would tell you.
sovay: (Rotwang)

[personal profile] sovay 2019-03-05 08:58 am (UTC)(link)
I just assumed it was meant to be contemporary, or at most a decade or two earlier; then the earliest mentions of the war made me go "oh, okay, it's WWII" until someone mentioned the actual date (1914) and ... oh.

I had that happen last week! I was reading a secondhand copy of Eilís Dillon's The Island of Ghosts (1990) in a used book store and from the general attitudes and technology I thought it was set in the first half of the twentieth century until a Concorde went overhead. I had to leave it a third of the way through, but I'm still not sure if the setting was meant to be contemporary to publication or just sometime after the invention of the Concorde.

The WWI setting is fairly unique; you don't see that a whole lot in kids' books.

I've read some; I agree it's a less common setting than WWII; I feel like the chances are increased with Michael Morpurgo.
ratcreature: RatCreature with an ear-trumpet: What? (what?)

[personal profile] ratcreature 2019-03-05 11:52 am (UTC)(link)
I find the idea that you could set a book during WWI without it being obvious that it is WWI really weird. But then I guess I'm used to WWI books set in Germany or at least somewhere in Europe. I really enjoyed some YA on WWI, but you really couldn't miss the setting, even though it wasn't set during battles or anything.
kore: (Default)

[personal profile] kore 2019-03-05 02:01 pm (UTC)(link)
The WWI setting is fairly unique; you don't see that a whole lot in kids' books.

The only one I can remember is Charlotte Sometimes, and maybe some of the later Anne of GG books?
sovay: (Rotwang)

[personal profile] sovay 2019-03-05 06:47 pm (UTC)(link)
The only one I can remember is Charlotte Sometimes, and maybe some of the later Anne of GG books?

Rilla of Ingleside (1921), which I read without much thinking about in elementary or middle school, actually turns out to be the only contemporary novel about World War I written by/from the perspective of a Canadian woman. It's literarily priceless on that front. I just remembered the war poetry—the Piper and the imagery of "going west."
kore: (Default)

[personal profile] kore 2019-03-06 12:20 am (UTC)(link)
the only contemporary novel about World War I written by/from the perspective of a Canadian woman

There's Aleta Day (1919) by Francis Marion Beynon, Next of Kin (1917) by Nellie McClung and probably others I haven't heard of. (Pace oursin I am typically really suspicious of something that gets touted as "the only" anything, especially in a historical context.)
sovay: (I Claudius)

[personal profile] sovay 2019-03-06 12:57 am (UTC)(link)
(Pace oursin I am typically really suspicious of something that gets touted as "the only" anything, especially in a historical context.)

Fair enough. I ran across that assertion in an article about the Anne books some years back, was very struck by it, and had read no other Canadian WWI novels from the perspectives of women to argue with it.