An autobiographical account of one Jewish girl’s childhood in Fascist Italy during World War II.
Barred from her Italian school, 6-year-old Lia now goes to a Judaic school. After more antisemitic laws cost her Papa his job, the family moves to Milan and then to Rome, where Lia’s father is forced to work clandestine jobs. Things grow steadily worse as occupying Nazi troops hunt and deport Jews. Lia, her sisters, and their Mama spend the rest of the war hiding out at a convent while Papa is on the run. But there are also moments of laughter and joy, and Lia finds comfort in her parents’ love. Levi narrates using dual perspectives—as the young girl experiencing the war and as an older woman remembering her past. The age-appropriate text is beautifully translated by Notini from the Italian. Lia’s young voice is perceptive and heartbreakingly vulnerable as she recounts her steadfast, even cheerful, acceptance of the changes in her life amid the insanity around her. Levi always makes it known when her older self is at the helm, directly addressing her “dear readers” and interjecting helpful supplementary information. Mason’s black-and-white sketches provide immediacy and added clarity. In a closing letter that gives more insight into Levi’s memories, she requests a moment of silence for the 6 million Jews the Nazis murdered, urges readers to always stand against racism, and expresses eternal gratitude to the American soldiers who “came as saviors” during the war. (This book was reviewed digitally.)
A remarkable, powerful young readers’ adaptation of an award-winning World War II memoir.
(Memoir/history. 9-14)