Wartime
Wednesday: Children’s War Stories
World War II impacted children and young adults at
many levels, often because they had fathers, brothers, uncles, or cousins off
in combat. But kids were also exposed to the war in the toys they played with (read my post about that here)
or the books they read. Here are three of the era’s most prolific authors:
Wheaton College graduate and minister Roy Judson Snell
wrote nearly one hundred children and YA books under his own name as well as
several pseudonyms. Born in 1878, his first story was published in 1922. Most
of his books were aimed at boys, however he did write a series about women in
the uniformed services such as Norma Kent
and the WACS, Sparky Ames of the Ferry Command, and Sally Scott of the WAVES.
Another author who wrote for young adults was Robert
Sidney Bowen, Jr. A Boston native who served in WWI as an aviator, Bowen penned
the fifteen volume Dave Dawson War Adventure series about a high school
graduate who follows his father to Europe just before WWII begins. Dave
befriends an English teen, and the two find themselves fighting beside the
British troops. Bowen’s Red Randall series is about a young aviator who serves
in the Pacific Theatre. In addition to his fiction career, he was a journalist
for several newspapers and magazines.
Hilda Van Stockum was a Dutch native who lives for
many years in the U.S. She published several children’s series about the war,
some of which were based on her family’s experiences, such as The Mitchells: Five for Victory. Her
best known book, The Winged Watchman
tells how traditional windmills were used for signaling despite German
occupation.
What books do you remember from your childhood?
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