Review Detail
4.3 1
Young Adult Fiction
330
The Cuban Missile Crisis from a Pre-teen Perspective
Overall rating
4.0
Plot
N/A
Characters
N/A
Writing Style
N/A
Illustrations/Photos (if applicable)
N/A
Franny Chapman has a loony, veteran uncle, a practically perfect little brother, an Air Force Major father, an older sister who may or may not be a Communist and a backstabbing best friend. The cute neighbor boy who just moved back to town complicates life still further. Not only has her life gone crazy, so has the world. Khrushchev and Kennedy splatter the news in 1962 when Russians move missiles to Cuba. Franny and her friends practice air raid drills and Duck and Cover in school in case of nuclear attack. With missiles aimed at the country, fear pervades the nation.
Countdown by Deborah Wiles is an engaging book, although finding an overarching conflict proves tricky. Plenty of micro-tension in subplots supplies the book with oomph to the end, but the main characters goal-to-be-achieved is a bit fuzzy. Survival itself seems too nebulous a goal for this tale. Still, this first of three in The Sixties trilogy from Scholastic proves an enlightening read.
The book style has been dubbed a documentary novel, and at first felt cumbersome and unnecessarymore of a curiosity than a central component. Perhaps this stems from the newness of the approach. As the book continues, the reader discovers that the documents exemplify the tumultuousness of the 60s. Song lyrics, news releases, propaganda, photographs, quotes, speeches and political cartoons explore the world swirling around Franny and help explain the panic felt during an already uncertain time. In fact, the primary sources lend a distinctive flavor to this book and its unique, little-discussed time period; it brings Frannys world into ours. Wiles also weaves in fascinating details of Americana from this time: the Wonderful World of Disney, 45s (records), the relatively new arrival of McDonalds and others.
Informative, entertaining and believable reading.
Countdown by Deborah Wiles is an engaging book, although finding an overarching conflict proves tricky. Plenty of micro-tension in subplots supplies the book with oomph to the end, but the main characters goal-to-be-achieved is a bit fuzzy. Survival itself seems too nebulous a goal for this tale. Still, this first of three in The Sixties trilogy from Scholastic proves an enlightening read.
The book style has been dubbed a documentary novel, and at first felt cumbersome and unnecessarymore of a curiosity than a central component. Perhaps this stems from the newness of the approach. As the book continues, the reader discovers that the documents exemplify the tumultuousness of the 60s. Song lyrics, news releases, propaganda, photographs, quotes, speeches and political cartoons explore the world swirling around Franny and help explain the panic felt during an already uncertain time. In fact, the primary sources lend a distinctive flavor to this book and its unique, little-discussed time period; it brings Frannys world into ours. Wiles also weaves in fascinating details of Americana from this time: the Wonderful World of Disney, 45s (records), the relatively new arrival of McDonalds and others.
Informative, entertaining and believable reading.
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