Its December 1941. The United States has just entered World War II. How will you help your country fight for its freedom? Will Help keep the countrys economy going as a young mother in the work force? Try to fit into society as a wounded African American veteran? Help end prejudice against Japanese citizens as a 12 year old California boy?
MARTIN (MARTY) GITLIN is a freelance book writer and journalist based in Cleveland, Ohio. In addition to Diana, Princess of Wales (Greenwood 2008), he has written several history books for students, including works on the landmark Brown v. Board of Education case, Battle of The Little Bighorn, and Stock Market Crash of 1929. He has also written biographies of NASCAR drivers Jimmie Johnson and Jeff Gordon.
Gitlin worked for two decades as a sportswriter, during which time he won more than 45 awards, including first place for general excellence from Associated Press. That organization also selected him as one of the top four feature writers in Ohio.
Another very interesting interactive book. This one being about World War II. You are given a brief introduction, then you choose which route you want to take going forward. I chose to be a woman married to an American soldier fighting overseas. Also included is a book list about World War II, internet sites to check out, a glossary and a bibliography. Highly recommend to students in middle grades and above and adults, too.
In a similar style to the "You Decide" books that send readers off in several directions depending on their responses, this one asks readers for their reaction to a scenario during WWII--without using an expedition file and relying only on their feelings of what the right thing to do might be--and then sends them in three different directions. After providing some background on the war, the text allows readers to choose to be the wife of an American solider serving oversea, a 12-year-old boy in San Diego faced with his classmates turning against their Japanese American classmate, or a black war veteran living in the segregated South. I liked how there were so many choices, no matter which character I chose, and there were no right answers, just choices. The scenarios helped bring the war home, and middle graders should enjoy this glimpse of the way it was.