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Message

You won't believe what kids are reading now.
Posted on 5/15/25 at 6:08 pm
Posted on 5/15/25 at 6:08 pm
and by kids, I mean 8-14 years old. reading World War 2 novels written for children. Seriously. The Wall Street Journal reported last week:
Wall Street Journal Article
I read Snow Treasure as a kid. Great book.
quote:
An auditorium of eager kids in Washington, Okla., were on the edge of their seats a few weeks ago as author Jennifer A. Nielsen told them about Lidia Durr Zakrzewski, a teenager who joined the Polish resistance during World War II. She served as the real-life model for the young heroine in Nielsen’s 2024 novel “Uprising.”
To the middle-grade audience, Nielsen was akin to a rock star, and she is a bit of one in the publishing world too. The types of books she often writes—historical novels about bombings, spies and young resistance fighters in World War II—have become some of the hottest novels with young readers starting around age 8.
Scholastic, one of the country’s leading children’s book publishers, is asking agents for more World War II fiction, even as the rest of the kids’ fiction market stagnates. At its book fairs, the publisher sees elementary and middle-school students darting over to the WWII bookcases, nabbing titles before they sell out. Books by authors like Nielsen and Alan Gratz have hit bestseller lists.
With tales of heroism and spycraft, battle scenes and bravery, Gratz and a coterie of other writers have tapped into many of the same themes that draw kids to the Harry Potter and Percy Jackson series. Instead of dragons, wizards and gods, there are Nazis and young resistance fighters.
In Nielsen’s thriller “Rescue,” 12-year-old Meg Kenyon becomes part of a dangerous mission through Nazi-occupied France. In Adam Gidwitz’s recent novel “Max in the Land of Lies,” 13-year-old Max Bretzfeld returns to Nazi Germany as a British spy. And in Alan Gratz’s “Heroes,” two friends live through the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.
“There is insatiable interest,” said Aimee Friedman, an editorial director at Scholastic and editor of one of the genre’s top authors, Gratz. The publisher looks for hot new titles and genres at its school fairs, she said, and quickly saw that kids wanted more: “World War II books are at the top of the list.”....
The hardcover edition of “Refugee” spent more than 280 weeks on the New York Times’s children’s middle-grade bestseller list and today has nearly 1.6 million copies in print.
Parents sometimes worry that the subject matter is too frightening for their kids, but advocates for the books say they provide a compelling opportunity to teach history.
“I tell them that these books aren’t so dark that their kids can’t read them,” said Valerie Koehler, owner of the Blue Willow Bookshop in Houston.
“For kids, it’s all about word-of-mouth,” said Sharon Hearn, founder of Children’s Book World in Los Angeles. Hot titles getting talked about include the 2024 book “The Bletchley Riddle,” by Ruta Sepetys and Steve Sheinkin, about two siblings caught up in the drama of World War II....
Wall Street Journal Article
I read Snow Treasure as a kid. Great book.
This post was edited on 5/15/25 at 6:09 pm
Posted on 5/15/25 at 6:14 pm to prplhze2000
Do any of the kids chop off their dicks or boobs?
Posted on 5/15/25 at 6:17 pm to KennabraTiger
quote:
Do any of the kids chop off their dicks or boobs?
No, but most are shooting ar15s.
Posted on 5/15/25 at 6:18 pm to prplhze2000
Better than having kids read Gender Queer
Posted on 5/15/25 at 6:21 pm to LRB1967
They are reading good books about history and all y'all can do is focus on queers.
Posted on 5/15/25 at 6:45 pm to prplhze2000
We read "A Bag of Marbles" in 8th grade (13 y.o.). A teacher went beyond the book and taught us a lot more about the holocaust. It was the first time most of us (all boys at a Catholic boys school) were really exposed to the Holocaust beyond just the general definition of what it was. At the time, and even looking back now, I thought that was age-appropriate. I don’t think we would’ve appreciated it as much if we were any younger.
Posted on 5/15/25 at 6:46 pm to WWII Collector
quote:
No, but most are shooting ar15s.
Hell yeah. Let’s GEAUX!
Posted on 5/15/25 at 7:36 pm to prplhze2000
I hate when authors don’t do their homework. In Poland a girls last name ends with an “a” until she gets married.
The character’s name should have been Lidia Durr Zakrzewska.
The character’s name should have been Lidia Durr Zakrzewska.
Posted on 5/15/25 at 8:28 pm to prplhze2000
My son is 11 and knows a frick ton about history, especially WWII, but he is also an autie or aspie. He went from trains, to dinosaurs, to space, and now history. The amount of random facts he knows is astonishing.
Posted on 5/15/25 at 9:34 pm to prplhze2000
My 10 year old nephew loves everything WWII…
This post was edited on 5/15/25 at 9:35 pm
Posted on 5/15/25 at 9:35 pm to prplhze2000
Right? I think it’s great that kids are learning about history
Posted on 5/15/25 at 9:53 pm to Hangover Haven
Wow. some Nazi downvoted that? Must be a Jap lover.
Posted on 5/15/25 at 9:59 pm to WWII Collector
quote:
most are shooting ar15s

Posted on 5/15/25 at 10:04 pm to prplhze2000
Did you read Number the Stars or Diary of Anne Frank as a kid?
Posted on 5/15/25 at 10:09 pm to MMauler
We read the graphic novel Maus in middle school. Excellent piece of work and did a wonderful job explaining the holocaust to a 7th grader.
Posted on 5/15/25 at 10:59 pm to Bubb
No. Anne Frank wasn't on all the lists as it is now. No one at Episcopal or Broadmoor would've known what you were talking about. Maybe at BRHS some might have. Some. I took two honors English courses in high school and never even heard of it.
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