Violence/War & Peace/Refugees

Children in the Spanish Civil War: A Review of A Thunderous Whisper

December 17, 2012
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Children in the Spanish Civil War: A Review of A Thunderous Whisper

In her debut novel, The Red Umbrella (Knopf, 2010), Christina Díaz González mined her rich family history to tell the story of a 14-year-old girl sent with her younger brother to a refugee camp and then to a foster family in Nebraska to save them from indoctrination in Communist Cuba. The program that brought Díaz…

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Division and Partition: A Review of A Beautiful Lie

October 28, 2012
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Division and Partition: A Review of A Beautiful Lie

We’re nearing the end of an election season marked by the length and rancor of the campaign. Many on all sides long for it all to be over, but no matter who wins, I remain concerned about the level of divisiveness and whether it can be healed from the top down, by whoever ends up…

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Silence speaks resoundingly in Monsier Marceau

October 18, 2012
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Silence speaks resoundingly in Monsier Marceau

         Monsier Marceau by Leda Schubert, illustrated by Gerard DuBois, $17.99. Growing up, I used to anticipate a glimpse of the mime Marcel Marceau on Sunday nights’ Ed Sullivan Show. He would step into the spotlight of a darkened stage and, through small gesture and simple steps, he made me see city streets…

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What’s “Legitimate” About Rape? A Review of Rape Girl

October 15, 2012
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What’s “Legitimate” About Rape? A Review of Rape Girl

Not long ago, a Republican candidate for the U.S. Senate, Todd Akin, made a medically ludicrous and morally objectionable statement about “legitimate” rape and the chances of a woman becoming pregnant afterward. His remarks and the controversy afterward make the recent release of Alina Klein’s Rape Girl (namelos) especially timely and important. Klein’s short novel…

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Human Rights for Kids: A Review of The Stamp Collector

October 9, 2012
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Human Rights for Kids: A Review of The Stamp Collector

Some readers might know that I’m in Portugal right now and will be here until the end of the year, as my husband has a visiting professorship. This afternoon I was looking at the bookshelf of the young woman from whom we’re renting our garret apartment, and I saw a large glossy exhibition catalog titled…

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Letters to a Girl at War: Dear Blue Sky

September 17, 2012
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Letters to a Girl at War: Dear Blue Sky

With the spread of the internet, an increasing number of young people in war zones have been able to tell their own stories, and to be heard by a wider world. One of the most famous blogs of this kind was written by an Iraqi teen named Hadiya in the mid-2000s, after the U.S. invasion.…

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Crow: If You Think “It Can’t Happen Here”…Well, It Already Has

September 3, 2012
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Crow: If You Think “It Can’t Happen Here”…Well, It Already Has

In the early 1990s I reviewed a historical novel for young readers, part of a historical fiction series from an educational publisher, about an interracial friendship between two 12-year-old boys in Wilmington, North Carolina in 1898. In the story, a race riot by white citizens culminated in the overthrow of the local government, and the…

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The Many Facets of Bullying: A Review of Cornered

August 6, 2012
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The Many Facets of Bullying: A Review of Cornered

Last December I reviewed A.S. King’s excellent young adult novel Everybody Sees the Ants for my local newspaper and interviewed the author on the novel’s central theme of bullying. Since then, several more books have come out on the subject, including Holly Thompson’s Orchards, which I reviewed for The Pirate Tree last month. Dear Bully,…

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The Forsaken speaks to reluctant heroes

July 19, 2012
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The Forsaken speaks to reluctant heroes

The Forsaken by Lisa M. Stasse (Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers) $16.99               Dystopian novels often allow readers inside the scariest of ideas. They encourage readers to think about war and our darkest fears, both internal and external. These novels also help readers recognize their own strengths through difference and even outsider…

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Focus on the Bully: A Review of Orchards

June 28, 2012
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Focus on the Bully: A Review of Orchards

The recently released video of middle schoolers tormenting a 68-year-old bus monitor in Greece, NY, near Rochester, has prompted national outrage aimed at the young bullies. Last week in a post titled “Where Have All the Manners Gone,” my sister (Albany) Times-Union blogger Valerie DeLaCruz, aka Boomergirl, called on parents to teach the values of respect…

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About

The Pirate Tree is a collective of children's and young adult writers interested in children's literature and social justice issues. For editorial or administrative issues, or to contact any of the authors whose email addresses are unlisted, please contact J.L. Powers at the address below. If you have a book you'd like to recommend for a review or an interview subject, guest writer, or topic that you'd like to suggest, please contact J.L. Powers.

Ann: aangel [at] aol [dot] com
Nancy: wflood [at]hotmail [dot] com
Varian: vcj [at] varianjohnson [dot] com
E.M.: emkokie [at] gmail [dot] com
Lyn: lynml [at] me [dot] com
Peter: pmarino300 [at] yahoo [dot] com
J.L.: jlpowers [at] evaporites [dot] com

Mission Statement

The writers at The Pirate Tree seek to expose and discuss literature and writers for children and teenagers that delve into themes of social justice and social conscience. The title, “The Pirate Tree,” comes from a picture book that Lyn Miller-Lachmann once wrote about two children whose grandfathers fought on opposite sides of a war. The children were prohibited from going into each others’ yards, but they figured out a way to meet and play pirates together by climbing a tree with limbs and branches above both their yards. Like the story suggested, we are interested in books and writers that question and rebel against the status quo, argue for peace and reconciliation, take the side of the marginalized and powerless, and use creative solutions to overcome obstacles.

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