This coming Sunday evening, April 7, marks the beginning of Yom HaShoah, Holocaust Remembrance Day. Jews around the world will place candles in their windows and recite prayers to remember the six million Jews who died between 1933 and 1945…
Tag: historical fiction
Maxie’s Turn: A Review of Fire in the Streets
When it appeared in 2009, Kekla Magoon’s The Rock and the River took historical fiction about the African-American experience out of the “safe” terrain of the Underground Railroad and the Civil Rights Movement to an armed revolutionary organization that confronted…
Children in the Spanish Civil War: A Review of A Thunderous Whisper
In her debut novel, The Red Umbrella (Knopf, 2010), Christina Díaz González mined her rich family history to tell the story of a 14-year-old girl sent with her younger brother to a refugee camp and then to a foster family…
Mystery, History, and Just Plain Fun: A Review of You Don’t Have a Clue
A year ago my friend René Saldaña, Jr. published an article in The ALAN Review about the need for more genre fiction for young readers, particularly mysteries, featuring Latino characters and settings. Given the long and lively tradition of detective…
Division and Partition: A Review of A Beautiful Lie
We’re nearing the end of an election season marked by the length and rancor of the campaign. Many on all sides long for it all to be over, but no matter who wins, I remain concerned about the level of…
Crow: If You Think “It Can’t Happen Here”…Well, It Already Has
In the early 1990s I reviewed a historical novel for young readers, part of a historical fiction series from an educational publisher, about an interracial friendship between two 12-year-old boys in Wilmington, North Carolina in 1898. In the story, a…
Dreams to Light the Darkness: A Review of Dreamsleeves
Coleen Murtagh Paratore is best known for her light-hearted middle grade series The Wedding Planner’s Daughter, The Funeral Director’s Son, Mack McGinn, and Sunny Holiday. The review journal I once edited, MultiCultural Review, praised the first Sunny Holiday book for…
A Classic for a New Generation: A Review of Nicholasa Mohr’s Nilda
For several decades, Arte Público Press and its children’s imprint Piñata Books has published new work by Latino and Latin American authors in English and Spanish and brought classic titles back into print. When Nicholasa Mohr’s young adult novel Nilda…
Daniel Half Human and the Good Nazi
I’ve been thinking a lot about how citizens in a democracy come to support extremists in hard times, and whether they understand the consequences of extreme ideas and politicians who consider their opponents enemies deserving of elimination. A recent bestseller,…