Let me just say, this is not my type of book; would never have pulled it off the shelf; would never have read a review and thought I would enjoy it. BUT, I think highly of the teen librarian who recommended it (and it's a fairly short book) so I took it to expand my Young Adult reading....Not a horrible book.Actually, it's an interesting book that deals with an alternate/future(?) war and how the current generation might face it. Daisy is sent to live with cousins in England when a war breaks out. There, she lives a very different lifestyle to the one she's known in New York. However, this war arrives in England, and her now-family gets separated. Through starvation, abandonment, terror, and other symptoms of war, Daisy manages to get back to them, her now-home.
I liked the writing style, 1st person, where the reader is inside Daisy's teenage head. However, I was so fixated on which war was going on, that I probably missed a lot of points which flushed out the story. Regardless, the end is still ... poignant. (I hesitate to use that word but it kinda fits).Read Also:Margaret Rotkowski's After the Dancing Days is an emotional and physical look at war and how it affects the young, though not exactly the same type of book.Because I don't read this type of book, Stephan Crane's The Red Badge of Courage was comparable in emotional trauma.
Funny enough, it's a depressing version of When Irish Eyes are Smiling by Suzanne Supplee.
Didn't you review a book like this before? I swear I read something here about alternate wars and people being separated from family...
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