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Skylarks' War

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A Boston Globe Best Book of 2018
A Horn Book Best Book of 2018

"Vivid, hilarious, and heartbreaking." —Elizabeth Wein, New York Times bestselling author of Code Name Verity

"The best children's book I've read this year." —Katherine Rundell, Boston Globe–Horn Book Award–winning author of Cartwheeling in Thunderstorms

"A near-miraculous balance of light and joyous touch with sometimes serious and even heartbreaking material." —BCCB (starred review)

From award-winning author Hilary McKay comes a "wholly satisfying" (Booklist, starred review) story full of wit, heartbreak, and hope as a girl fights for her independence during World War I.
Clarry Penrose finds the good in everyone. Even in her father, who isn't fond of children, and especially girls. He doesn't worry about her education, because he knows she won't need it. It's the early twentieth century, and the only thing girls are expected to do is behave.

But Clarry longs for a life of her own. She wants to dive off cliffs and go swimming with her brother Peter and cousin Rupert. And more than anything, she wants an education. She helps Peter with his homework all the time, so why can't she manage it by herself? When war breaks out, Clarry is shocked to find that Rupert has enlisted. Then he is declared missing, and Clarry is devastated. Now she must take a momentous step into the wide world—for if she misses this chance, she may never make it.

This is an inspirational, funny, and heartwarming story about a girl who dares to open doors that the world would rather keep closed.
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  • Reviews

    • Kirkus

      July 1, 2018
      Steadfast love and friendship stand proof against the changes and challenges of war for a group of Edwardian-era children.The effects of the Great War still resonate, at least for British novelists, and here McKay adds to the crowded shelves with a tale featuring an ensemble cast of siblings, relatives, and school friends (many previously met through flashbacks in Binny in Secret, 2015) growing up in Plymouth and summering in Cornwall before, during, and (for survivors) after. At the center of the cast is Clarissa "Clarry" Penrose, ignored by her widowed father, raised by housekeepers along with her fretful, saturnine older brother, Peter, but gifted with both a bright intellect and a happy, affectionate disposition. Both serve her in good stead through expanding self-expectations as a girl and then woman while others, notably dashing yet "recklessly kind" older cousin Rupert, enter the story and then go off to war. The author shifts among multiple points of view to explore developing relationships from different angles and to relate incidents along the curved front's "monstrous smile" in a frank but dispassionate way that leaves readers free to respond as they will. She carries the story several years beyond the war's end to show happy endings for nearly everyone and, for Clarry, a surprise reunion guaranteed to leave nary a dry eye in the house. As McKay fans can rightly expect, each character (all are white) displays an individually distinct mix of temperament, outlook, abilities, and foibles, but all, even the minor ones, are fundamentally decent and--though sometimes with some effort--lovable. Winning as ever, with an overall Little Princess feel reminiscent of McKay's own sequel to that classic, Wishing for Tomorrow (2010). (Historical fiction. 11-13)

      COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      November 5, 2018
      Deftly interweaving humor and heart, McKay crafts an intricate novel exploring the overlapping realms of family, friendship, and romantic love in early-20th-century England. Since clever Clarry’s mother died soon after she was born, Clarry and her disgruntled older brother, Peter, have lived with their aloof, dour father, who believes that girls don’t deserve education and criticizes Peter for sharing his books with his sister. Sent to boarding school against his will, Peter befriends Simon, a sensitive loner who likewise struggles to discover where he belongs. As she did in her books starring the eccentric Casson family and irrepressible Binny, the author introduces credible, memorable characters whom readers will readily embrace. The novel’s most dazzling personalities, though, belong to Simon’s impulsive and big-hearted sister, Vanessa, who nurses injured soldiers after WWI breaks out, and Clarry and Peter’s charismatic cousin, Rupert, who ships out to France with the British army and is wounded at the front. The characters’ intricate relationships and deep bonds give unusual emotional ballast to the story, which provides a poignant portrait of an era and a war “where absolutely nothing made sense” and of teens catapulted prematurely into adulthood. Ages 10–14.

    • The Horn Book

      November 1, 2018
      In Binny in Secret (rev. 7/15), McKay introduced us to Clarry, her brother Peter, and their beloved cousin Rupert in a subplot set during World War I in London. Here, McKay gives us the full story of these three: stubborn, grumpy Peter; kind, charismatic Rupert; and especially Clarry, adoring of the boys and, as a girl, destined to stay home and care for her selfish, neglectful father. As the three grow up, Peter is sent to boarding school; Rupert enlists in the army; and Clarry defies her father's apathy and earns a place in an academically rigorous girls' high school. Then Rupert is declared missing, presumed dead, and Clarry sets off to find him. This is a story both broad and deep, sketching the scope of the Western Front (shaped like a ravenous, expectant smile. A greedy, unreasonable smile, considering how very, very well it was fed ) but drawing us closely into Clarry's heart and mind as she emerges valiantly into adulthood. McKay's genius as a writer is everywhere apparent: she conveys complex nuances of character with a light hand, moving gracefully from the hilarious to the heart-breaking; she paints scenes with spare, lucid detail (for example, a blackbird turns over dead leaves like someone flicking through a book to find the illustrations ). Buoyant with the warmth of family love and friendship, and especially with McKay's witty, incisive style, this exceptional novel invites?and amply rewards?re-reading. deirdre f. baker

      (Copyright 2018 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

Formats

  • Kindle Book
  • OverDrive Read
  • EPUB ebook

Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:5.2
  • Lexile® Measure:800
  • Interest Level:4-8(MG)
  • Text Difficulty:3-4

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