Why am I passionate about this?
I’d like to say I have no expertise in this topic. And yet…don’t we all? We’ve all lived through it. I was born in 1937—in Honolulu, the daughter of a US Army officer. WW II was a pervasive part of my childhood, as my father spent time in the Pacific and then after the war ended, we lived in Occupied Japan for some years. But war had always been a part of my family’s history, as is true for so many people. My great grandfather left a written account of his capture and imprisonment during the Civil War. And much more recently, my own son, an Air Force pilot, died in the cockpit of a F-15. Ironically, he had married a German wife, and he is buried in her village cemetery near her grandfather, who served on the Russian front years earlier. His child, my granddaughter, puts flowers on both of those graves. All of these pieces of my own history combine, I think, to create this passion I have for the telling and retelling of stories that can make us more aware of the futility of war.
Lois' book list on war through the eyes of children
Why did Lois love this book?
Five years old when the Nazis invaded her homeland of Poland, Anita Lobel spent the war years in hiding. Her memoir is intimate and suspenseful and even occasionally funny. Here’s a glimpse… through the eyes of a real child…of what survival means, and of those who helped her achieve it.
1 author picked No Pretty Pictures as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.
Anita Lobel was barely five years old when World War II began and the Nazis burst into her home in Kraków, Poland. Her life changed forever. She spent her childhood in hiding with her brother and their nanny, moving from countryside to ghetto to convent—where the Nazis finally caught up with them.
Since coming to the United States as a teenager, Anita has spent her life makingpictures. She has never gone back. She has never looked back. Until now.
- Coming soon!