Skip to main content

ALL THE BROKEN PIECES by ann e. burg and INSIDE OUT & BACK AGAIN by Thanhha Lai


I had to post these two books together.  They are both about Vietnamese refugees during the Vietnam War.   (You know I love a good war story.)  They are both told in verse.  And they are both REALLY good. 

ALL THE BROKEN PIECES by ann e. burg

copyright date: April 2009
primarily marketed for: grades 6-8

Rebecca Caudill Young Readers’ Book Award Nominee 2012

Tells the story of a 12 year-old-boy whose mother is Vietnamese and father is an American soldier that never returns.  When life becomes too dangerous in Vietnam, Matt’s mother seizes the opportunity to send him to America as soon as she is given the chance.  Matt is adopted by a loving couple, but that doesn’t mean the memories of a war-torn Vietnam and the family he left behind don’t haunt him.

Although it is not likely all the experiences would happen to the same kid, it sure makes for a moving story.  Matt not only battles his past, but he also struggles with bullies on his baseball team and the demons of wounded Vietnam War veterans who ultimately join him on a journey towards healing.

This is a book with lots of heavy ideas packed in very few words.  Be prepared to tear up.


INSIDE OUT & BACK AGAIN by Thanhha Lai

copyright date: 2011
primarily marketed for: grades 4-8

National Book Award Winner

I read this one soon after finishing All the Broken Pieces.  Because Matt’s experience in Vietnam was primarily influenced by full-blown war, he did not have many memories of his culture or previous way of life before the influence of war.  So, I was surprised that this book started by painting a moment representative of Vietnamese culture. 

This book differs from All the Broken Pieces in that it is told from the point of view of a girl, the family comes to America together, and the author largely wrote from her own experience.  However, both stories feature a missing dad and bullies. 

Reading Inside Out & Back Again deepened my understanding of the effects war has on individual lives.  It is a beautifully told story with no easy resolutions. 

Comments

  1. The first sounds good, & poignant as you said. I've read the second & loved it. It's a good look into the experiences of those who have to leave their beloved homes, even though it means safety. Thanks!

    ReplyDelete
  2. I loved Inside Out & Back Again. My 12-year-old daughter and I have decided it will be our next pick for our mother-daughter book club. I think we are also going to read Shaun Tan's The Arrival alongside it.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

TAKE WHAT YOU CAN CARRY by Kevin C. Pyle

copyright date: March 2012 primarily marketed for: young adults (12 and up) Despite the fact that the teacher in me sees so many lesson possibilities in Kevin C. Pyle’s graphic novel Take What You Can Carry , you should read it simply for the grace of its stories.   The artwork is as striking as the stories it tells.   Using artwork in two different colors and styles, Pyle tells the stories of two teenage boys living years and miles apart.   And yet, he communicates the universality in their experiences.   One boy is a Japanese American forced to move into an internment camp during WWII.   His family struggles to maintain their dignity and sense of peace under unbearable conditions. The other is a rebellious boy with an attitude whose reckless behavior causes him to wind up in trouble with the law.   To make amends, he finds himself completing community service hours in the most unlikely place.   I found my...

THE SEA IN WINTER by Christine Day

  release date: January 5, 2021 primarily marketed for: Middle grades The Sea in Winter  by Christine Day is a gift to its readers. It is a book of quiet strength with much to offer.  Maisie is a ballet dancer who feels most herself when she is at the dance studio. However, at the start of this story, Maisie is coping with a serious knee injury that prevents her from dancing long-term. She misses her friends from dance and struggles to maintain those connections when she is no longer part of the dancing life they shared.  When her mom and stepdad plan a road trip to the Olympic Peninsula to visit sites of familial and cultural significance, Maisie stubbornly overworks her healing knee. She is determined to heal and return to the studio  faster than expected. Although her knee is the only focus of Maisie's wellness journey, it turns out there is more to healing than physical fitness.  Maisie is a quietly compelling character, but I was surprised to find myse...

THE GREATEST SUPERPOWER by Alex Sanchez

copyright date: January 1, 2021 primarily marketed for: middle grades The Greatest Superpower  by Alex Sanchez is a gem. I was in a bit of a reading slump until I picked up this book, thanks to NetGalley .  This middle grades book is about comic book loving Jorge who is navigating his parents' divorce and his first crush on a girl. Jorge's parents not only announce they are getting divorced, but his father also reveals to Jorge and his twin brother Cesar that she is transgender and wishes to live as her true self.  Although this announcement is a confusing surprise to Jorge, his love for his father ultimately trumps all. Cesar, however, is angry at their dad and works to prevent Jorge from sharing the truth with his friends.  In the midst of the changes in Jorge's family life, he and his friends are trying to invent a new superhero for a comic book contest. When Jorge blurts out the idea of the superpower to gender-shift, his friends jump on board.  Conversatio...