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398 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 1990
Molly is a nine-year-old girl living in 1944 with her Mom, sister and two brothers. Her father is away at war and the family is trying to hold onto some semblance of normalcy - Molly, in particular, wants everything to be like it used to be. Oh, and there's a prank war that goes waaaaay too far.
"None of this would have happened if Dad were home"
Miss Campbell (Molly's favorite teacher) announces a school-wide contest called "Lend-a-Hand" where the classes are split into groups and they need to find ways to help soldiers. The girls in Molly's class plan to knit socks, which Molly thinks is stupid, so decides to go rogue.
"School is your war duty. Being a good student is as important as being a good soldier."
Molly wants the grand, happy and exciting Christmases of the past but her older sister, Jill, keeps talking about how things have to be 'realistic' this year. Molly knows that things are changing beyond her power - but how can she balance the new with the old? Is it even possible to have a good Christmas without her father?
"Being realistic meant expecting things to be ordinary and dull. Molly did not want to feel that way about Christmas."
In this book, Molly is so excited to have a real, live "English Girl" (TM) stay with her and her family....so when the war refugee comes to her house, she decides to invite the girl to play the-house-is-bombed with her. And is bummed when the girl (politely) declines to reenact her trauma. Yes. Really.
"She won't smile or anything, and she wouldn't play in the bomb shelter either."
Molly and her two best friends, Linda and Susan, went away to summer camp for the very first time. As her two week camping extravaganza wraps up, their camp counselors announce a "Color War" - Susan and Molly are put on the blue team while Linda gets assigned the red. At first the three girls are excited...but quickly what seemed to be a light-hearted games twists as everyone becomes serious.
"My dad told us he was scared before he went away to war," she said. "But he said it was okay to be scared because it meant he had a chance to be brave."
Molly is beyond excited for her dad to finally return from the war - but when he writes a letter about all the exciting new things he is ready to see, he mentions he can't wait to see his good ol' olly Molly. And for the first time in a long time, Molly actually wants to change - to become grown up and sophisticated and prove to her dad that she's wayyy cooler than olly Molly.
Molly sighed. "Even if I wore your exact same clothes, I still wouldn't look grown up."
"You can't make it happen faster than it's going to happen," said Jill. "And you shouldn't try, anyway."