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LOUISA JUNE AND THE NAZIS IN THE WAVES by L.M. Elliott Kirkus Star

LOUISA JUNE AND THE NAZIS IN THE WAVES

by L.M. Elliott

Pub Date: March 22nd, 2022
ISBN: 978-0-06-305656-5
Publisher: Katherine Tegen/HarperCollins

For the United States, involvement in World War II is just beginning, and 13-year-old Louisa June is experiencing the first effects back home in Tidewater Virginia.

Nazi U-boats have been torpedoing American ships in the busy waters off Chesapeake Bay, although the War Department is censoring any reports, but Louisa hears the rumors and then finds a charred life preserver. Then her father’s tugboat is torpedoed and her beloved brother Butler is killed. Although her father survives, he is guilt-ridden, and Louisa’s mother, who suffers from depression, blames him for the death. Louisa’s older sister, Katie, moves to Newport News to learn to weld and help build desperately needed ships, while her older brothers Will and Joe join the Merchant Marine and the Navy, respectively. Left behind at home, grieving for Butler, and with two debilitated parents (but thankfully a strong elderly cousin nearby, the delightfully indomitable Cousin Belle, who sets the record straight for Louisa on the nature of depression), Louisa does her best to pick up the slack and, in the trying, finds her own strength. Evocatively threaded with the scents and sounds of Tidewater Virginia coastal communities, this story presents a fascinating, lesser-known aspect of the war told from a young girl’s perspective. Successfully tackling the devastation of depression on family relationships, the bitter cost of war, and the uplifting strength of no-nonsense friendship, this story has impressive depth. Main characters are White.

Superb.

(author's note) (Historical fiction. 10-13)