index_slice_01.jpg index_02.jpg
index_slice_03.jpg
index_slice_07.jpg
index_slice_09.jpg
index_slice_11.jpg
index_slice_13.jpg
index_slice_15.jpg
index_slice_17.jpg
index_slice_19.jpg
index_slice_21.jpg
index_slice_04.jpg
index_slice_22.jpg

world_war_II_cover.jpg

Growing Up in World War II
by Judith P. Josephson

Lerner Publications, 2003



"I cannot imagine a day that I spent from the time I was 14 until I was 19, that I wasn't aware of the war . . . it had an impact on everything."

-Nancy Potter, who lived on a farm
in eastern Connecticut and attended
Tufts University in Medford, MA during WWII


In the midst of the harsh realities of wartime, the children of World War II drew together to work, play, and support each other. Faced with the possible loss of fathers, brothers, uncles, and friends, children like Sammy Berman and John Smith whose fathers were fighting in Europe, did their best to help out. Japanese American children like Louise Ogawa were sent to internment camps. No matter what their age or gender, many children helped by working, saving money to buy war bonds, conserving and collecting things like rubber and tin, planting victory gardens, and learning to do without things like sugar, butter, and new shoes. Through diaries, letters, songs, interviews, photos, and other sources, discover what life was like during World War II through the true stories of actual children who lived through this time.


Take a Sneak Peek inside this book.

Just for Kids activities for Growing Up in World War II

Websites to learn more about WWII:
www.stg.brown.edu/projects/WWII_Women/tocCS.html
www.history.navy.mil/index.html
www.historyplace.com/worldwar2/timeline/ww2time.htm



awards.jpg

Winner, San Diego Book Awards, "Juvenile History"



reviews.jpg

Growing Up in World War II: 1941-1945

"Books in the attractive Our America Series give today's children an opportunity to understand what childhood and adolescence were like for America's youth in the past. Each book focuses on several children describing various aspects of their lives. In New Century, one girl is growing up on a southern plantation; another child is Kermit, the son of Teddy Roosevelt. . . . the writing is lively as Josephson gives a general introduction to the times, including such topics as work, play, and education. World War II follows a similar pattern, but the emphasis is on what it was like to live through the war years. Both books feature evocative black-and-white photographs. The design is pleasing . . . Footnotes, a selected bibliography bolstered by a list of books and Web sites, and a two-page spread of follow-up activities round out each book."
Booklist

new_arrivals.jpg
bottom_table_left.jpg armstrong-cover.gif

Louis Armstrong

Lerner Publications,
History Maker Biographies

bottom_table_right.jpg

bottom_table_left.jpg armando_cover2.jpg

Armando and the
Blue Tarp School


Lee & Low Books, Inc.

bottom_table_right.jpg
chevrons.gif  More about this title
chevrons.gif  Browse more New Arrivals

index_slice_30.jpg
bottom_table_left.jpg  

Nelson Mandela

Lerner Publications,
History Maker Biographies

bottom_table_right.jpg
The Loon Alan Pinkerton: The Original Private Eye More Nitty Gritty Grammar Growing Up in Pioneer America Growing Up in a New Century Growing Up in World War II The Monarch Butterfly Nitty-Gritty Grammar Book Mother Jones - Mary Harris Jones Biography Nikki Giovanni: Poet of the People Ludwig van Beethoven - Bold Composer Louis Armstrong Biography Armando and the Blue Tarp School Umbrellas Jesse Owens: Track & Field Legend Walt Disney: Genius of Entertainment