“Skrypuch’s Last Airlift: A Vietnamese Orphan’s Rescue from War (rev. 9/12) told the dramatic story of eight-year-old Tuyet’s 1975 rescue from Saigon aboard a giant plane filled with babies in cardboard boxes. This sequel describes Tuyet’s adjustment to life with her adoptive Canadian family, the story’s drama this time revolving around the surgery she must have on her leg. Polio has left Tuyet with one leg that’s weak and smaller than the other: “Her ankle turned inward, making her foot useless. She had to limp on the bone of her ankle to get around.” Memories of fire, bombs, helicopters, and a hospital—things she thought she’d forgotten—come flooding back, and Tuyet is all alone in the hospital (no parents allowed) and knows no English. Readers will be just as riveted to this quieter but no-less-moving story as Tuyet bravely dreams of being able to run and play—a new concept for a girl who has spent her days caring for babies. Especially satisfying is Skrypuch’s portrayal of Tuyet’s growing trust in her adoptive family, whose love and affection never fail to amaze and thrill her. Illustrated with photos. Includes notes, further resources, and an index.”
—jennifer m. brabander
How one author brings life to millions who have lost it
The endless quest for exposure
Posted by Layla Bozich on Tuesday, February 12, 2013 The Sputnik.
How one author brings life to millions who have lost it
“Some people call me the Genocide Queen.”
Marsha Skrypuch earned this title through writing books. As a Ukrainian born in Brantford, she has penned over 10 titles about a myriad of problems throughout time, including wars, immigration, famine, and yes, genocide.
“I like to give voice to people who have not been able to have a voice,” said the 58-year-old author.
Skrypuch’s goal is to normalize a variety of people’s experiences from around the world. When she could not find a body of fiction about Armenian experiences and hardships at the library, she decided to begin her research and recount those events herself. She wanted to know who spoke for the millions of people who had died in the Armenian Genocide from 1915-18 through deportations and massacres. She realized that many survivors of the genocide had lost their identities, and she felt obligated to tell their stories.
With her Master’s Degree in Library Science, Skrypuch considers herself to be a detective. She found the diary of a girl who survived the genocide from a library in California, where there was only one copy available. She needed it. After ordering it through an interlibrary loan, Skrypuch was allowed to have it for 48 hours to transcribe as much as she could. Multiply that experience by 50, she said, and she has enough information for a single novel.
However, research became easier as time went on and word spread about her works.
“Just by the fact of writing the first book in an authoritative and respectful way … all of a sudden I was brought into the Armenian community and trusted with these things that they didn’t want to show other people, because they were afraid of how they would be used,” she said.
Skrypuch said approximately 85 per cent of Armenians living in Turkey at the time of the genocide were killed, and the remaining 15 per cent were saved by Muslims. Because of this, it was clearly difficult for an Armenian to write on the topic due to their intolerance for the Turks.
“You have to look within the community and see the shining lights who were able to transcend the politics and hate of the time and risk their lives to help their fellow human beings,” she said.
Dr. Dave Jenkinson is a retired professor at the University of Manitoba, and he taught children’s and adolescent’s literature courses for over three decades. He has been the editor of CM: Canadian Review of Materials, an online book review journal, for 15 years.
During his years as a professor, Jenkinson used Skrypuch’s novels in his classes as “examples of excellence in the [historical fiction] genre.”
“All truly good books have to speak to a wide audience, and Marsha’s novels do that because, at their core, they address fundamental human concerns that transcend both time and place,” said Jenkinson.
Many of Skrypuch’s works are marketed to schoolchildren and young adults, despite dealing with ghastly and grotesque recollections of past horrors. She said that readers are more likely to identify with the victim of her fiction when marketed to children or young adults, because in most cases, “the victim is the dessert” for adult-targeted fiction. For Skrypuch, “children’s lit is written to change the world.”
However, after Enough’s release in 2000, Skrypuch’s own life was at stake.
The story, written about a young girl and her father saving a Ukrainian village from famine by tricking the sadistic leader, resulted in death threats and hate mail so callous that Skrypuch started bringing police protection to her book launches. She had to cancel her son’s birthday party, and the police had to accompany him to recess when he was in kindergarten. Slurs such as “neo-Nazi” were hurled at Skrypuch for speaking out about Holodomor, the Soviet Union’s man-made famine that killed almost 10 million Ukrainians from 1932-33.
After the release of Hope’s War in 2001, another story based on World War II Ukraine, the hate mail started again.
“It was a really dark time for me, and I didn’t know if I would continue to write,” she said.
Skrypuch’s self-proclaimed breakout book, Nobody’s Child, rekindled her passion for writing after it was released in 2003. It focused on an Armenian girl rescued by her friend before she suffered a horrific fate in the Armenian Genocide. Skrypuch moved from doing eight school visits a year to over 160 a year to promote her book. Nobody’s Child was shortlisted for awards both nationally and internationally the following year.
It was not until many years later that a Ukrainian book was treated with the same respect.
Viktor Yushchenko, former President of Ukraine, awarded Skrypuch with the Order of Princess Olha for Enough in 2008, celebrating the first commercial piece of fiction written about Holodomor in the English speaking world. The award, a Ukrainian civil decoration, is given to citizens for “outstanding achievements in development of economy, science, culture, social sphere, defense of Motherland, protection of man’s constitutional rights and freedoms, state building and public activity, [and] for other services before Ukraine.”
“Marsha’s fiction and nonfiction puts a human face on past events which could easily become just forgotten footnotes in history,” said Jenkinson, “Because Canada has, fortunately, never experienced war firsthand on our soil, we need to be made aware of the horrendous impact that armed conflict, whether it be within a single country or between countries, can have on ordinary people.”
Skrypuch’s sharpened research skills, and knack for keeping an audience allows the stories of historical horrors to reach around the globe, though she sees her own work on a much simpler scale.
“I will never dwell on the despicable nature of some people,” she said, “I like to highlight the heroism.”

Kontakt TV: Making Bombs for Hitler
Here’s a segment from the December 22, 2012 edition of Kontakt TV taped during the launch of Making Bombs for Hitler. Scroll to about 1:12.
Kontakt, December 22, 2012: Making Bombs book launch
Meet the professional: Denise Anderson, Director of Marketing and Publicity, Scholastic Canada
My CANSCAIP Interview with: Denise Anderson, Director of Marketing and Publicity, Scholastic Canada
How did you become the director of marketing and publicity for Scholastic Canada?
My background is journalism and public relations. My first job in the book industry was with Coles Bookstores in corporate communications, first as an assistant to Kelly Duffin (a great mentor) and then as the editor of their bi-monthly consumer magazines.
I then moved to Scholastic as their publicist briefly before heading to Vancouver to work at Raincoast and Douglas & McIntyre. When I returned to Toronto in 1998, I worked at D&M, managing special sales and Candlewick Books, which they distributed at the time.
I returned to Scholastic in 2002 to work in marketing. Scholastic Canada had decided to focus on growing its trade presence. Many of the people I’d worked with were still there and now running the company, and the others brought on board were people I knew from so many years in publishing –it made for a very comfortable transition!
What advice would you give to someone who wanted a career in marketing or publicity for a publisher?
You have to be willing to do anything: work nights, weekends, get coffee, lift boxes. If you go to an industry party, you’re not there as a guest. You have to be alert and make sure things go smoothly. You have to be a multi-tasker who pays attention to detail.
When hiring, I will look for people with retail experience who have also taken publishing courses. But the most important factor is that you have a passion and knowledge of books. You are surrounded by book people and if you don’t love that, it’s hard to take the pace.
Can you describe the qualities of a dream author to work with?
These days, it is crucial to be connected on social media. An author must have online presence. They must be accessible to their audience. Having said that, they don’t have to spend all of their time on Facebook, Twitter, and blogs, but there are so many exciting possibilities for promotion and this is often the way readers find you.
In the world of children’s books, it’s really important to have a website where teachers and librarians can go to get information about you: your books, your biography, whether you do school visits.
Authors who are “out there” doing events and appearances are fantastic. The ones who tell their publishers what their doing and when, with plenty of time for us to help promote and get books where they need to be are even better!
Dream authors also know that there is a fine line between promoting a book and harassing about a book. They are respectful of everyone’s time. It’s great to let the local bookstore know you have a new book out, offer to sign stock or whatever they’d like, but going in every day to see if they’ll bring more in doesn’t generally earn you any friends.
And now describe an author from heck.
An author from heck is one that plans events on their own but doesn’t let us know until a day or two before and then expects us to somehow have books in place and do promotion for them.
They are too aggressive with their needs. There is a fine line between promoting and irritating, and the author from heck is blind to that line. I don’t know any publicist who doesn’t wish there were more hours in a day and who doesn’t do everything possible to get the word out about their books.
It is completely understandable that not everyone is super tech-savvy these days, but it’s very important to at least have a basic knowledge. “I don’t have email” doesn’t instill confidence in an author’s ability to help spread the work about their books.
Authors are almost by definition introverts. Do you get frustrated by authors who won’t do publicity things for you?
It does no one any good to put an author into an uncomfortable situation. We respect the various personalities of authors and try to make sure that what we ask them to do is in keeping with their comfort levels. While not everyone looks forward to getting up and talking in front of a crowd, I would say most of the authors I’ve worked with are as happy as I am to get out of the office and talk to people.
Can you describe your typical day?
There isn’t really such thing as a typical day, although every day seems to involve a lot of email and meetings! It could involve meeting about our websites, signing off on ads and catalogues, working on authors’ tour schedules.
Our department tends to get a lot of general questions and complaints sent our way, on top of the usual tasks. It varies at the time of year as well. If a sales conference is coming up, I’m preparing presentations and gathering sales and marketing materials; meeting with our team to create marketing plans; and organizing the “social” part of conference.
September is “book festival” month, so we are arranging for author appearances, getting promotional materials to our retail partners at the events and manning booths on weekends. It’s also when we have a lot of authors on tour. Summer is also surprisingly busy, prepping for the fall events.
What advice do you have for a first-time author?
Join CANSCAIP.
Connect with other authors and illustrators. It is a small but generous community and there are lots of mentors who are willing to share their own experiences.
Be nice to everyone. Canadian children’s publishing is a small community. You never know where someone may turn up next. Also, word gets around, so make sure the words about you are positive ones.
Hone your presentation skills. Being able to do school and library presentations is absolutely key. The first step may be doing one for free at your own kids’ school.
If you could generalize, what would be the most common problems you run into?
Many new authors have unrealistic expectations about bookstore signings. We read about line-ups out the door with mega-author bookstore signings, but unless you’re Dav Pilkey, the reality is that most authors will get few people out. Even relatively well-known authors will get few people out. But if that happens, appreciate those who showed up and spend some quality time with them. Sylvia McNicoll wrote a great blog about book launches recently.
A better way around it is to plan a community event that is creative and interesting. Invite your friends and family, neighbours, students, teachers, and the local media. And ask your local independent bookseller to be the vendor. This brings attention to you and your book, and it helps your local bookseller as well.
We are always on the lookout for new ways to connect authors with bookstores in a successful way.
Peer into your crystal ball and tell me what you see in the future for publicity in children’s publishing…..
Now is like the wild west. It’s an exciting time in book publicity. There are so many new opportunities and they are constantly changing. It is crucial to be flexible and adaptable.
I love the bloggers. In the last couple of years, they have become the new way to promote books. I have had more fun marketing books in the last two years than ever. There are so many cool new venues out there and hardly enough hours in the day to keep up with it all. Not necessarily every new online venue will be successful, but it is so fun to try.
Some of the challenges? We need to support authors and illustrators more with training on Skype and other online tools. Ebooks are on the rise, even in the children’s book industry. I hope that means people will just buy more books in different formats.
Marsha Skrypuch is the author of sixteen books for children and young adults. Her two most recent are One Step At A Time: A Vietnamese Child Finds Her Way (Pajama Press, 2012) and Making Bombs For Hitler (Scholastic, 2012). She is thrilled to have two Forest of Reading 2013 nominated books: Silver Birch Fiction for Making Bombs, and Red Maple non-fiction for Last Airlift.
--
Last Airlift is a Cybils 2012 finalist!
A lovely way to begin a new year! Just found out that Last Airlift is one of 5 Cybils finalists in the Teen & Tween category! Check it out here.
Get Thee to a Bookstore With This YA Booklist
By Marsha Forchuk Skrypuch
In the spirit of December gift-giving, I asked my fellow children’s authors to help me put a list together of books they’re giving and ones they’re looking forward to reading over the holidays.
Here are picture book suggestions:
Margriet Ruurs, whose most recent book is Amazing Animals: The Remarkable Things That Creatures Do (Tundra, 2011) will be giving Island Santa written by Sheryl McFarlane and illustrated by Sheena Lott, to the children on her list. “It’s a beautiful story and one that all children on the Gulf Islands can relate to as we watch Santa arrive by boat.”
Marilyn Helmer says, “I just bought a copy of Lisa Dalrymple’s new seasonal picture book, If It’s No Trouble…a Big Polar Bear. The story is about adjusting to new and unusual situations. The illustrations compliment the story perfectly and the rhythm and rhyme make it a great read aloud book.” I have ordered copies of this book as well and am looking forward to reading it before giving them away. Lisa is a rare author who can amuse in perfect rhyme. Marilyn’s newest picture book is called That’s What Bears Are For, illustrated by Sonia Nadeau (Peanut Butter Press, 2012) will surely find its way under a number of trees as well.
“I would like another copy of Picture a Tree by Barbara Reid,” says artist and illustrator, Kristi Bridgeman. The book shows tree varieties through the seasons, “but what I love are the plasticine images and green cover because it makes me want to make play dough.” Krisi also recommends Solomon’s Tree by Andrea Spalding and Janet Wilson (Orca, 2005), “because it made me cry in the bookstore.”
One of illustrator Dianna Bonder’s favourite seasonal books is a hard to get classic by Jerry Pallotta called Dinosaur Christmas (Scholastic US). I searched around for this one and the only place that it’s available is from Pallotta’s website (www.jerrypallotta.com) but he’ll autograph it for you. The most recent book Dianna has illustrated is Pedro the Pirate, by Tim Hoppey (Raven Tree Press, 2012).
Short story writer Merna Summers, who won the Marian Engel Award in 1989, says “I have just read Noah’s Bark (Lerner, 2010) by Stephen Krensky, with enchanting illustrations by the Quebec artist Rogé. It tells the story of how each animal was given its individual way of speaking by Noah, as a means of keeping some sort of order on the ark.”
Christine Tripp (illustrator of Sheri Radford’s Penelope and the Preposterous Birthday Party, Lobster, 2009) says, “I’ve picked up a copy of Mine (Knopf, 2012), a little picture book with illustrations by Patrice Barton, for my 3.5 year old granddaughter. The author is Shutta Crum. The illustrations are what really knock this little book out of the park, so, so sweet. The story line of everything thing being the older sisters, EVERYTHING, would apply to any home where there is a baby sibling. It suits two of my granddaughters to a tee!”
Children’s Book News editor Gillian O’Reilly will be giving Crazy About Soccer!, a collection of poems about the sport by Loris Lesynski, with illustrations by Gerry Rasmussen (Annick Press) to her 3.5 year old great-niece. “To describe her father and brother as avid soccer fans is putting it mildly, so the subject matter and the amazing versifying talent of Loris Lesyski seems like a perfect combination. The fact that the illustrations are by one of the creators of my favourite Canadian comic strip (Betty) is icing on the cake.” Gillian is the author of two non-fiction titles herself: Slangalicious: Where We Got That Crazy Lingo (Annick, 2004) and The Great Number Rumble: A Story of Math in Surprising Places (co-written with Cora Lee, Annick, 2007).
Helaine Becker’s A Porcupine in a Pine Tree, illustrated by Werner Zimmerman (North Winds Press, 2010) is finding its way onto several gift lists this year, in its traditional format from years past and new this year in a book and gift package. Maureen McGowan , author of Deviants, (Amazon Children’s Publishing 2012) says, “I’m looking forward to reading A Porcupine in a Pine Tree, by Helaine Becker, with my four-year-old nephew. He was introduced to it last year and nearly had it memorized. I’m hoping he’ll sing the book to the whole extended family this Christmas.”
Wendy Whittingham, illustrator of Valerie Sherrard’s Miss Wondergem’s Dreadfully Dreadful Pie (Tuckamore, 2011), is buying A Porcupine in a Pine Tree for herself, “because it’s Canadian and because it’s awesome!” Wendy also recommends Maurice Sendak’s classic Where the Wild Things Are and Mo Willem’s Don’t Let the Pigeon Drive the Bus.
Wendy also says, “I’m looking forward to giving a copy of I’m Bored, by Michael Ian Black, and illustrated by Debbie Ridpath Ohi to my nephew (Simon & Schuster, 2012),” says Maureen McGowan. “The minimalist illustrations really capture the emotions of the characters–even the potato!” Christine Tripp agrees: “I am very tempted to keep it for myself, just because I love that ridiculous damn potato! The idea of trying to entertain a bored potato alone keeps making me chuckle.”
Marjorie Gann, author of Five Thousand Years of Slavery (illustrated by Janet Wilson, Tundra, 2011) suggests four picture books:
The Huron Carol, illustrated by Frances Tyrrell (William Eerdmans, 2003): “Tyrrell’s exquisite illustrations situate this famous carol squarely within the native context. Mary is a Huron mum, the manger a longhouse, Bethlehem a boreal forest, the kings wear snowshoes, etc., all as in Father Brebeuf’s telling. Tyrrell is a brilliant draughtsman, and the design of each page is enchanting: an arched window in the centre concentrating on the story, framed by a background of the Canadian landscape or sky (constellations representing bears, wildcats, etc.)” This classic book is out of print but can be purchased used.
“Zlateh the Goat,” by Isaac Bashevis Singer. “This comes in a collection by Singer, Zlateh the Goat and Other Stories, illustrated by Maurice Sendak (Programs and Genres, 2001). Set in the vanished world of the European Jewish communities, this Hanukkah story begins when the father tells his son Aaron to take their goat Zlateh to the butcher; the money for the animal will help the family to buy what they need for Hanukkah. But on the way, the wind whips up a fearsome snowstorm. The beloved goat leads the boy to shelter in a haystack while the winds whirl; the goat nourishes herself on the hay, Aaron drinks her milk, and they stay warm and safe. The storm ended, the boy is found by his panicking father and — you guessed it — Zlateh returns home to the grateful family. A beautiful book. There’s a video made in black and white, set in Czechoslovakia, with Janacek’s music in the background, that captures the story’s tone magnificently.
The Tailor of Gloucester by Beatrix Potter (Little Simon, 1987). “Well, this will never go out of print! I’m sure everyone knows the story (of the tailor who has to finish the mayor’s waistcoat by Christmas morning but becomes ill – only to be saved by the little mice who live in his walls, and are threatened by Simpkin the cat!) but I wouldn’t want to forget it. Quaint, old-fashioned — but my (Grade 4) students loved it.
Elijah’s Angel: A Story of Chanukah and Christmas by Michael J. Rosen, illustrated by Aminah Brenda Lynn Robinson (Harcourt, 1992). “Elijah Pierce really existed — an African-American barber and woodcarver who was a friend of both the author and illustrator. This is the story of a friendship between a Jewish-American boy and a devout Christian woodcarver, of how they shared their traditions. It’s not at all sappy or Brotherhood Week – ish, though. But it is about Christmas angels and Hanukkah menorahs, and how they bond two people together.”
I have a whack of picture books to give out myself and I always enjoy reading them gently before wrapping. Rebecca Bender’s Don’t Laugh, Giraffe (Pajama Press, 2012) is a fabulous selection on so many levels. I love how it demonstrates the teasing that can happen between friends but gently shows how a tease gone wrong can hurt. The illustrations and text are both vivid yet simple. A great choice for toddlers to grade two.
I am also giving Cat’s Night Out by Caroline Stutson and J. Klassen (Simon & Shuster, 2010). Ostensibly a counting book, but it will not bore the adult reader no matter how many times a child wants to hear it. The illustrations are visually stunning, showing detailed streetscapes, many retro styles of clothing, dance and music.
A Birthday for Bear by Bonnie Becker and illustrated by Kady MacDonald Denton (Candlewick, 2012) is the perfect book to get a child out of a spoiled brat funk. Humourous and engaging.
Children Make Terrible Pets by Peter Brown (Little-Brown, 2010) will make your littlest family members chuckle but it will also make them think from the point of view of the animal when they drag in a squirrel or sparrow and want to keep it as a pet.
For kids eight and up, Robin Stevenson, author of Hummingbird Hearts (Orca, 2012), has a great suggestion. “I will be buying my eight-year-old son as many Foxtrot comic books as I can find! The first books he enjoyed reading on his own.” For example, AAAA: A Foxtrot Kids Edition, by Bill Amend, (Andrews McMeel, 2012). “The character of ten-year-old Jason is kind of like a grown up techie version of Calvin [from Calvin and Hobbes],with the same quirky humour and mischievous spirit. Anyone who likes math, science and computers will love this kid and his family.”
My own suggestion for kids aged eight and up is Jennifer Lanthier’s stunning new picture book, The Stamp Collector, illustrated by Francois Thisdale (Fitzhenry & Whiteside, 2012). I didn’t include it in the picture book category above because it really is for older kids and adults. It’s the story of a city boy and a country boy, both who grow up in a repressed country. One becomes a writer and is imprisoned for his stories. The other becomes his prison guard. A powerful and nuanced story that is sure to win awards.
Illustrator Jan Dolby, (Gabby, by Joyce Grant, Fitzhenry & Whiteside, 2012) is giving her daughter Hockey Girl by Natalie Hyde (Fitzhenry & Whiteside, 2012) for Christmas. Jan says it’s “a perfect fit for her…she plays girls’ peewee rep hockey and has played for boys’ hockey league as well. I think the story line will grab her attention and she will finish the book with excitement.”
Dianna Bonder is looking forward to reading the Penderwicks books with her oldest daughter over the holidays. Jeanne Birdsall’s Penderwicks books are The Penderwicks at Point Mouette, The Penderwicks on Gardam Street, and The Penderwicks: A Summer Tale of Four Sisters, Two Rabbits, and a Very Interesting Boy (Yearling). They just begun reading the series and she called them “truly excellent!”
Wendy Whittingham suggests J. R. R. Tolkien’s The Hobbit, Yann Martel’s Life of Pi, Charlotte’s Web by E. B. White, Holes by Louis Sachar, and The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe by C. S. Lewis for kids aged ten and up.
And what children’s novels are authors reading and giving over the holidays? An eclectic variety:
“I am saving Shane Peacock’s Vanishing Girl from Tundra Books to read over the season,” says Marilyn Helmer.
“I plan to give Urve Tamburg’s The Darkest Corner of the World to an Estonian friend who came to Canada when she was a young girl in the 1950s,” says Judith Robinson, playwright and author of Working Miracles: The Drama & Passion of Aimee Semple McPherson (James Lorimer & Company, 2006). “Her grandfather was interned by the Soviets and never returned. I’m sure the experiences in the book will speak to her about her own family.”
Helaine Becker, author of Porcupine in a Pine Tree: is looking forward to reading Leah Bobet’s Above (Arthur Levine, 2012), Joanne Levy’s Small Medium at Large (Bloomsbury, 2012), Deborah Kerbel’s GG-nominated novel, Under the Moon (Dancing Cat, 2012), and Valerie Sherrard’s Counting Back From Nine (Fitzhenry & Whiteside, 2012).
Valerie Sherrard recommends Amphibian by Carla Gunn (Coach House, 2009). “It’s a crossover book – written for adults but also great for young people.” Sherrard also recommends Mahtab Narsimhan’s The Tiffin. “It had me instantly mesmerized with its rich descriptions. A wonderful story that plunks you down in Mumbai and takes you along on a young man’s perilous search for hope and home.”
Gillian O’Reilly says, “What I’ll be reading over the holidays is Trilby Kent’s Stones for My Father, (Tundra, 2011) recent winner of this year’s TD Canadian Children’s Book Award.”
Rebecca Upjohn, author of The Secret of the Village Fool (illustrated by Renné Benoit, Second Story Press, 2012) says, “I am really looking forward to reading Mastiff (Random House, 2011) book three in Tamora Pierce’s Beka Cooper trilogy. I have long enjoyed Pierce’s books for their smart female characters who often challenge the status quo. Her books set in the kingdom of Tortall are among my favourites. The Beka Cooper series is about a young woman employed by the city guard. She and her working dog, Achoo, and a cast of many take on such subjects as slavery, counterfeiting, and the clash between those living in poverty and those born to nobility. The books in this series are long but Pierce is a compelling storyteller and a master world builder and there is always a payoff worth the read.”
Rebecca Upjohn has another suggestion as well. “Although marketed for adults, I would consider giving an older teen who loves epic fantasy, K.V. Johansen’s Blackdog (PYR Books, 2011). The world created in the book is compelling. There is an intriguing treatment of gods and other immortal beings and the charged history between these beings and humans is slowly revealed. The story focuses on a mortal girl, the living incarnation of a goddess, and Blackdog, a spirit who possesses a human mortal male. Blackdog’s only goal is to protect the goddess regardless of the toll it takes on the man whom it possesses. It is a layered story with many twists which kept me guessing. The connection between the goddess and Blackdog and that between their two human counterparts is complex and unpredictable. Altogether a great read for someone in need of a book to sink their teeth into.”
“A book I am looking forward to re-reading over the holidays is Dianne Linden’s beautifully-written Shimmerdogs (Thistledown, 2008),” says Merna Summers. “It is the story of a little boy whose world falls apart in various ways after his mother is posted out of the country on a peace-keeping mission. The joy of the book, besides its honesty, is the beauty of the prose. I believe that Dianne was short-listed for a GG Award for this one, and anyone who reads it will readily understand.”
Maureen McGowan, is looking forward to reading Insurgent, by Veronica Roth (Katherine Tegan, 2012). “I thoroughly enjoyed her first book, Divergent, because it’s fast-paced and tackles big questions we first faced as teens such as, who do I want to be, and what kind of person am I? Her dystopian world poses the questions: ‘Can you be too honest? Too self-sacrificing? Too brave? Too friendly? Too knowledgable?’ in an interesting and exciting way. I’ve been saving Insurgent as a treat for when I finish the last book in my own dystopian trilogy.”
For myself? Many of those I’ll be giving will be books that I reviewed over the past year. I would also highly recommend The Talk-Funny Girl by Roland Merullo (Crown Publishing, 2011), a novel about a dirt-poor girl who transcends her abusive childhood. It will appeal to anyone who loved Jeanette Walls’ The Glass Castle (Scribner, 2006).
Resource Links review of One Step At A Time
Resource Links
Volume 18, Number 1
October, 2012
SKRYPUCH, Marsha Forchuk
One Step at a Time: A Vietnamese Child Finds Her Way
Pajama Press, 2012. 92p. Illus. Gr. 3-6.
978-1-927485-02-6. Pbk. $12.95
One Step at a Time is an easy-to-read book about Tuyet, a Vietnamese girl adopted by a Canadian family. It is the sequel to Last Airlift: A Vietnamese Orphan’s Rescue from War and picks up where that book leaves off. Tuyet suffers great pain from having a weak ankle. Just weeks after her adoption, her new family decides Tuyet should have surgery to correct the problem. Tuyet goes through the surgery, learns to use crutches, and takes physiotherapy in the hope of one day being able to walk confidently on her own two feet.
At the same time, Tuyet, who speaks little English, is learning about her new family, new home, and new culture and is healing from terrifying experiences in Vietnam. Events that seem ordinary to many Canadian children are extraordinary for Tuyet, and we share her confusion and delight as situations—such as a flaming cake and a pile of pretty boxes, or the passing of a crop-dusting airplane—begin to resolve into meaning.
This is a gentle non-fiction telling of a particular period in Canadian history and of the experience of being a new immigrant with health concerns. Notes in the end matter provide some useful context for readers who may not understand the significance of polio or the conventions of narrative non-fiction. Black-and-white photos, including pictures of Tuyet and her family, add to the reading experience. Although Tuyet’s experiences are unusual and sometimes frightening, the narrative is full of love, kindness, and comfort.
One Step at a Time is a good choice for sensitive young readers interested in non-fiction about other children, other cultures, and recent history; it may be eye-opening for many readers. Although aspects of Canadian culture have changed, the disorientation that new Canadians experience may be similar to Tuyet’s. The book is likely to encourage many questions and wide-ranging discussion in a reading group, and the story is highly likeable. Readers do not need to know the author’s earlier book about Tuyet to understand this one, but many will want to read more about this brave and spirited girl.
Thematic Links: Families; Adoption; Vietnam; Health and Wellness
Leslie Vermeer
Making Bombs for Hitler: The Book Shelf review
Thursday, November, 08, 2012 – 1:01:00 AM
The Book Shelf – Nov. 8
Making Bombs for Hitler, By Marsha Forchuk Skrypuch, 160 pages. @ SPL: J FIC Skryp
Making Bombs for Hitler brings to light one of the lesser-known aspects of World War II and the Holocaust – slave labourers, often teenagers or young people in their early 20s. Captured by Nazi soldiers in Russia, especially in the Ukraine, they were brought to Germany and forced to perform dangerous work from dawn to dusk.
Regarded as “expendable,” they were shot if they became too sick to work. In Marsha Skrypuch’s story, Lida was one of the youngest slave labourers. When she was taken by Nazi soldiers, Lida was separated from her parents and her younger sister and sent to a labour camp. Surviving on a meager daily portion of bread and thin soup, and clothed in only a thin dress, Lida survived the long days of hard work only through luck, resourcefulness and the desire to find her sister.
Then, with a group of other girls, she was assigned the dangerous work of constructing bombs that would be used by the Nazis to kill allied soldiers and civilians. How Lida survived the terrible days which followed was later a mystery to her.
But she did survive, barely, and was later rescued by allied soldiers, only to find that she could not go home. Joseph Stalin regarded anyone who had been captured by the Nazis to be a Nazi. Such people were either killed or sent to work camps in Siberia.
Making Bombs for Hitler is a companion book to writer Marsha Skrypuch’s award-winning Stolen Child, which relates the story of Lida’s sister, Larissa. Both of these stories, told with sensitivity and compassion, are based on historical fact.
** Recommended for ages nine to 12.
– Sally Hengeveld, librarian
Nice review of Making Bombs and Susan Aihoshi’s Torn Apart
Making Bombs for Hitler by Marsha Skrypuch (Scholastic Canada) $8.99
Torn Apart: the Internment Diary of Mary Kobayashi, by Susan Aihoshi (Scholastic Canada) $16.99
ON Remembrance Day especially we take time to pay homage to those who went to war so that we might enjoy freedom – a freedom which was bought at a horrific cost for so many.
We can more easily appreciate the sacrifices made on our behalf by learning about them through various resources – family history, television documentaries and books. One very powerful approach to learning is through personal narrative, which broadens and enriches the historical perspective. Kids (and this reviewer) can relate more easily to social history, which allows them to see through the eyes of the protagonist and comprehend how war affects a particular individual.
Two excellent books that provide this perspective are Making Bombs for Hitler by Marsha Skrypuch and Torn Apart by Susan Aihoshi. Both titles focus on individuals who by strength of character and resourcefulness face and deal with circumstances that drastically change their worlds.
Skrypuch writes about the slave raids conducted by Hitler throughout the Soviet Union during the Second World War. Between three million and 5.5 million Ostarbeiters, as these people were called, were transported to Germany and forced to work under horribly inhumane conditions. Thousands died either from starvation or from overwork.
Many who were rescued and sent back to the Soviet Union were killed by Stalin who considered even Nazi captives to be Nazis. For this reason people kept silent for many years about their experiences as captives and it was not until the Soviet Republic dissolution in 1991 that information began to surface.
The story describes the capture by the Nazis of eight-year-old Lida and her little sister Larissa. They endure appalling conditions on the train to the work camp and are separated as soon as they arrive.
Lida is advised by another prisoner to lie about her age and find a skill or she will likely be killed. She tells the Germans about her ability as a seamstress and is sent to work in the laundry where she proves that she is indeed talented. Unfortunately, she is soon transferred to a new assignment, assembling bombs. With incredible bravery, Lida and her fellow prisoners risk certain death in carrying out a plan to sabotage the bombs and contribute their bit to defeating the Nazis. Finally, they are rescued and in the gruelling aftermath of war Lida and her friend Luca face more challenges in the refugee camps.
The harsh, brutal and unrelenting pain, fear and misery encountered by the camp labourers is made evident in Skrypuch’s wonderful writing. Lida’s world is documented with clarity and accuracy. The reader is left wondering how anyone can survive such misery and thankful that we live in a different place and time.
Susan Aihoshi’s Torn Apart is subtitled “The Internment Diary of Mary Kobayashi” and is set in Vancouver in 1941. While in no way as gut-wrenching as the Skrypuch title, it makes it clear that war affects everyone. This is another title in the excellent Dear Canada series which melds fiction with historical information and photographs.
In the acknowledgements we learn that the author has drawn on family experiences to flesh out the book’s main character. The diary format provides a window on the everyday life of a girl whose entries begin on her 12th birthday, Saturday, May 24, 1941. We see her happy family life begin to disintegrate as the government imposes more and more restrictions on Japanese Canadians.
Mary’s entry for Sunday, Dec. 7, 1941 describes the news about the bombing of Pearl Harbor and its effect on the family. Mary ends her entry with the comment, “The war has finally become real in a way it never was before.” Finally, the unthinkable happens and Mary’s grandfather is sent away to a labour camp.
A mere seven months later Mary and her sisters find themselves on a train to New Denver to begin a new life in an internment community. Her family is fractured as her mother is still in Vancouver caring for an ill brother and her father has been detained for questioning. The diary ends with a reunited family still living in New Denver hoping to eventually return home.
Mary’s life as a child in the 1940s in Vancouver in many ways reflects the life of any child of that era. She describes her enjoyment of Guides, her school life and her special interests and activities. Mary’s voice is authentic and charming and because she is so likable the reader is all the more appalled at the unfeeling cruelty of the government. It was not until Sept. 2, 1988 that Brian Mulroney announced a Redress Settlement which acknowledged the offences against Japanese Canadians during and after the Second World War and ensured that in future no Canadian would be subject to this kind of injustice.
Torn Apart is suitable for readers aged eight to 12. Skrypuch’s title is for a slightly older audience that includes adults. Reading either or both will reinforce your gratitude for the heroic efforts made by those who fought for us.
Fran Ashdown worked for many years as the children’s librarian at the Capilano branch of the North Vancouver District Library. She will be thinking of her father, an RAF radio officer, on Remembrance Day. For more information check your North Shore libraries.
Contributing Writer
Marsha and Tuyet visit Blessed Kateri School in London
Thank you Mrs Evans and Blessed Kateri students and staff for a wonderful morning!!!