Book Description
for War Is Over by David Almond and David Litchfield
From Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC)
This short, illustrated novel set in England during World War I captures the nonsensicalness of war from a child's perspective. John's father is away fighting while his mother works at the munitions plant in his city. John, white, is struggling to make sense of the war, wonders when it will be over. He's even written to the king and the Archbishop of Canterbury to ask them. (He's received no replies.) When a pacifist challenges John and his classmates to reject propaganda telling them "they" are at war -you're children, he says, you are not at war-the man is belittled and chased away, but not before dropping photos of German children. John secretly picks one up. The photo is labeled "Jan from Dusseldorf." John can't stop thinking about Jan and writes the German boy a letter, only to have the police show up at his house after mailing it. "You're raising a traitor, miss," the police tell his mom. Dreamed/imagined sequences in which John meets Jan are no more --and perhaps less -surreal than the actual trip John and his classmates take to the munitions factory in a story firmly grounded in John's open-hearted, innocent perspective in which politics do not matter (and has not, it must be noted, been influenced by the trauma of living in a war zone). Mostly somber black-and-white illustrations adeptly reflect the story's emotional tenor. (Ages 8-10)
CCBC Choices 2021. © Cooperative Children's Book Center, Univ. of Wisconsin - Madison, 2021. Used with permission.