Honoring Veterans

November 11, 2013.  I’ve just returned from Washington D.C where events are unfolding on the National Mall to honor veteran’s of war.  Today at 1 p.m. at the Vietnam Veteran’s Memorial – the Wall – will be  the Veteran’s Day Ceremony. Story Corps is here to record stories.

Some remarkable books have been written to pass down the story of U.S. soldiers in the war to children and teens. There are hundreds of books. In honor of the veterans from this war and other wars, here is

Cynthia Kadohata, author of Cracker

Cynthia Kadohata, author of Cracker

mention of a few books that stand out to me.  One is a dog story. Cynthia Kadohata tells the story of a  soldier, Rick, and his dog, Cracker, who sustained him and awed him with his courage while they served as a team of mine detectors in Vietnam. The novel is Cracker, Best Dog in Vietnam.

Eve Bunting’s The Wall tells of a small boys journey with his father to the long river of a wall inscribed with the names of soldiers who died. There, the father and son find the name of the boy’s grandfather who he had not met.

While I was presenting a program on children and war in Norway, Maine,  I met a teacher of high school seniors.  This fine teacher of writing and journalism  told me she and her students are about to read the adult novel The Things They Carried.  Here  are the author’s, Tim O’Brien’s, words in this book, one of his descriptions of the weight of what a soldier carries:

tim-obrien-logo“They all carried fragmentation grenades – 14 ounces each. They all carried at least one M-18 colored smoke grenade – 24 ounces. Some carried CS or tear gas grenades. Some carried white phosphorous grenades. They all carried all they could bear, and then some, including a silent awe for the terrible power of what they carried.”

If you have more interest in books for children and teens about the Vietnam war, here is a reading essay I wrote some years ago for SLJ.  If You Knew Him Please Write Me.

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