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Book by Kimberly Brubaker Bradley From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The War That Saved My Life, by Kimberly Brubaker Bradley,[1] is a 2015 children’s historical novel published by Dial Books for Young Readers. In 2016, it was a Newbery Honor Book[2] and was named to the Bank Street Children's Book Committee's Best Books of the Year List with an "Outstanding Merit" distinction and won the Committee's Josette Frank Award for fiction.[3]
Author | Kimberly Brubaker Bradley |
---|---|
Language | English |
Genre | Historical Fiction |
Publisher | Dial Books for Young Readers |
Publication date | 2015 |
Publication place | United States |
Media type | |
Pages | 316 |
Followed by | The War I Finally Won |
Ada Smith is a ten-year-old girl who has never left her apartment in London. Her physically abusive widowed mother is too embarrassed to let her go outside because of her clubfoot, and claims Ada is mentally disabled as a pretext. Ada is regularly punished by being put in a damp cabinet under the sink where cockroaches live. She is used as a servant, cooks and takes care of her six-year-old brother Jamie, whom she is quite protective of.
In September 1939, the British government begins to evacuate children in urban areas of England during World War II to escape, sending them to the countryside. Ada’s mother refuses to send Ada, saying nobody will want to take care of her. Meanwhile, Ada has spent all summer teaching herself how to walk and decides to leave with Jamie without their mother knowing. They are evacuated by train to Kent to get away from the conditions coming because of the war.
Susan Smith, who lives in a coastal village in Kent, is forced to take Ada and Jamie in, despite her aversion to caring for children. Away from her mother, Ada is allowed to freely move about by Susan despite her clubfoot, and as such befriends Susan and other villagers. Susan owns a pony named Butter, and Ada learns to ride, as well as to read, write, and sew, and she is introduced by Susan to many concepts she has never experienced before. Susan overcomes her reluctance to take care of the children, reading to them, making them clothes, obtaining crutches for Ada, and allowing Jamie to keep a cat she intensely dislikes. Ada helps British troops evacuate across the English Channel from Dunkirk, and identifies an enemy spy, who is detained.
Susan has discovered that it is possible for an operation to be conducted on Ada to correct her clubfoot, but it requires money and permission from Ada's mother. After months of not responding to Susan's letters regarding Ada's operation, Ada's mother comes to the village. She complains about the government's 'forcing' her to spend money on her children, and sharply criticizes Susan and Ada's 'posh' behavior. Ada is able to stay with Susan, but to continue caring for her brother she decides to move back to London with her mother, who believes that the capital will not be bombed anytime soon. The Smiths move into a new - albeit little better - flat, and Ada's crutches are taken away by her mother. She believes her mother never wanted to have children in the first place and only took Ada and Jamie back for the lowered expenses, suspicions confirmed by their mother. One day, she leaves to go to work and Ada and Jamie escape to an air raid shelter just before a bomb damages the area. Susan comes and finds the Smith children, bringing them back to the village, where she finds that a bomb has destroyed her house. Butter and Jamie's cat have survived; Ada decides that by being picked up in London by Susan rather than the latter staying at home and getting killed sufficiently repays her debt to Susan for being rescued from life with her mother.
The War That Saved My Life received critical acclaim. The Horn Book Magazine claims "This is a feel-good story, but an earned one".[4] School Library Journal talks about the emotional connection readers will have: "Readers will ache for her as she misreads cues and pushes Susan away, even though she yearns to be enfolded in a hug. There is much to like here - Ada's engaging voice, the vivid setting, the humor, the heartbreak, but most of all the tenacious will to survive exhibited by Ada and the villagers who grow to love and accept her".[5] Thom Barthelmess in The Horn Book Magazine stated "Bradley’s novel is exceptional for the characters’ deep humanity".[6]
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