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Time of Fire

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When a German bomb kills his mother during World War II, Sonny Prudhoe's world is torn to pieces, and he begins a journey to understanding war and personal victory. By the author of Blitzcat.

172 pages, Hardcover

First published August 12, 1994

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About the author

Robert Westall

122 books110 followers
Librarian Note: There is more than one author by this name in the Goodreads database.

Robert Westall was born in North Shields, Northumberland, England in 1929.

His first published book The Machine Gunners (1975) which won him the Carnegie Medal is set in World War Two when a group of children living on Tyneside retrieve a machine-gun from a crashed German aircraft. He won the Carnegie Medal again in 1981 for The Scarecrows, the first writer to win it twice. He won the Smarties Prize in 1989 for Blitzcat and the Guardian Award in 1990 for The Kingdom by the Sea. Robert Westall's books have been published in 21 different countries and in 18 different languages, including Braille.

From: http://www.robertwestall.com/

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Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
Profile Image for Alex  Baugh.
1,955 reviews130 followers
October 3, 2012
People sometimes ask me what my favorite WWII book is out of all that I have read. It is hard to answer that question because everything I have read so far has at least some redeeming quality of showing how the war impacted the lives of the children (and the occasional adult or animal.)

One of my favorite authors, however, is Robert Westall. Westall wrote my favorite WWII animal story, Blitzcat, capturing the influence one cat had on the lives of so many while searching war-torn England looking for her true human, after her owner joined the war effort.

Then I read The Machine Gunners, which I thought wonderful, even if it did have a very unlikable protagonist. And now I bring to this blog another Westall book, Time of Fire.

Like all his friends, 10 year old Sonny carries his aircraft-recognition book everywhere he goes, so when a German plane drops a bomb on the store where his mother is shopping, killing her, he knows it was a plane they called the Flying Pencil.

In despair, Sonny's father decides to join the RAF to seek revenge on the plane that killed his beloved wife and changed their happy lives forever. Sonny is sent to live with his grandparents in their coastal home near Newcastle. As Sonny settles into life with his grandparents, helping them safeguard their home with sandbags and barbed wire, working in the garden and listening to the wireless together for news of the war, he develops a strong relationship with his Granda, a man who patiently answers Sonny's questions and is always willing to teach him about life. Perhaps the most telling example of that is the way he guides Sonny into slowly and methodically making friends with a war-traumatized dog, whom he eventually wins over and names Blitz.

But Sonny has a guilty conscience. His Mam was in the store buying matches because Sonny had forgotten about them in his rush to buy the newest copy of Wizard, a magazine for boys. So when his father's attempt at revenge comes to an end when he is shot down, Sonny decides it is now up to him to avenge his mother's death.

But what can a young boy do? In a Robert Westall story, plenty!

Unlike the kitty in Blitzcat or Chas in The Machine Gunners, Sonny does not have a strong single- minded focus. But like them, Sonny is eventually faced with a difficult dilemma. When faced with having to choose life or death, will he let revenge control his decision or rise above it?

For that reason, and despite being a World War II novel, Time of Fire might still resonates for today's readers. Revenge seems to have become such a prevalent way of dealing with the small personal injuries in life today, that watching Sonny's struggle between doing the right thing or getting his revenge for his Mam's death might just help decide a future action on a reader's part (assuming we are what we read, of course).

I have to admit that after reading The Machine Gunners, I was a little put off Robert Westall's WWII novels, but I am glad I have now returned to them. Sonny is a very appealing main character, making it easier to root for him. And the portrayal of Nana and Granda is superb. I wish they were my grandparents. You can just feel the love in their home. Even the bickering is done with love. This was the same atmosphere in Sonny's home before his mother was killed and his otherwise happy, content father's personality turned black. It makes you realize how fleeting happiness can be.

Like Michelle Magorian (Goodnight, Mr. Tom and Back Home, among others novels) Robert Westall is a master at creating a realistic picture of the British home front in World War II. Unlike Magorian, Westall really had experienced the war first hand, growing up in the same area that he sets his stories in, always making them so very rich in details not necessarily commonly known.

This book is recommended for readers aged 9+
This book was borrowed from the Seward Park Branch of the NYPL
Profile Image for Elizabeth.
Author 42 books3,186 followers
Read
January 25, 2010
Robert Westall is one of my favorite authors.

I picked this up in the library thinking I hadn't read it before--I guess the title is not entirely memorable, but in fact not only have I read it, I own it. Westall is the master of detail, and his stories are just gripping. Plus, given that I think he's writing from memory a lot of the time (of his own childhood), there is a verisimilitude to his detail that I feel I have no hope of emulating. sigh

The story is of revenge and growth and war and Newcastle and train journeys and plane spotting and family.

Profile Image for Huw Collingbourne.
Author 28 books23 followers
December 26, 2017
Westall is a marvellous writer especially when, as here, recounting his fictionalised memories of a wartime childhood. This book covers much of the same ground as his more famous "The Machine Gunners" and it is not, in my view, as good a book at that one. Even so, a good read: by turns evocative, funny and sad.
Profile Image for Gerald.
295 reviews7 followers
March 31, 2015
My son and I just finished this. We both loved it. It is so vivid.. What it must have been like to grow up in the UK during WW2, with a dreadful threat hanging over you and very real adult dangers everywhere.

The detail makes you realise how many children's writers that you think are good are nowhere near as good as Robert Westall.

Sad, but thoroughly worthwhile.
4 reviews
June 1, 2010
this book gave me an idea of what was like to be on the second world war times.
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews