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by Laurence Yep

Summary

School Library Journal:

Gr 4-6–Through a stacatto, present-tense narration that moves back and forth between the experiences of a 12-year-old girl and the men on the Enola Gay, Yep’s novella tells the events of the day the first atomic bomb was dropped and its aftermath. Sachi survives but is badly burned; her sister dies and her soldier father is killed in action. For three years the girl spends most of her time indoors, as newcomers to the city fear the scarred survivors. Then she travels to America for plastic surgery, which enables her to take part in her society again. She returns to Japan, hoping to help other victims. Yep ends with two chapters on the destructive potential of nuclear warfare and on some of the efforts being made toward disarmament. His words are powerful and compelling, and the facts he presents make readers realize the horrors of that day and its impact beyond. As a fictional character, Sachi never becomes much more than a name, but even so, readers will be moved by her tale. Hiroshima has a more adult format than Junko Morimoto’s more personal My Hiroshima (Viking, 1990) or Toshi Maruki’s Hiroshima No Pika (Lothrop, 1982), both of which tell the story in pictures as well as in words.–Louise L. Sherman, Anna C. Scott School, Leonia, NJ

Awards:

  • Booklist Editors’ Choice – Books for Youth – Middle Readers Category: 1995

Topics

4th Grade, 5th Grade, 6th Grade, Ages 9-12, Historical Fiction, WWII