Together, the friends do their best to navigate not just the perils of schoolyard bullies but also the frightening realities of the war, of news of family members never to return home again, of the deadly Spanish flu that’s sweeping the world, and of the injustices of the racial divides of 1918 Baltimore. They are bound by friendship and a sense of patriotism to do their part to help the world—whether the small one in their corner of Baltimore or the wider one that spans the globe—to become a place of justice and peace.
Author Robert Black created this novel out of his grandmother’s memories of growing up in wartime Baltimore, and he paints a visually vibrant canvas of the period. The characters are authentic and sincere, and the story accurately portrays several important events surrounding the final months of World War I, including an erroneous French report of armistice that spread worldwide over the wire services, leading to a jubilant celebration that was immediately followed by a crushing realization of the truth. The novel also delves into the terror caused by the 1918 influenza pandemic, which ultimately killed more people than the war did. Readers will appreciate young Eleanor’s efforts to be worthy in every way of the sacrifices that so many are making for her—and of the liberty that we all hold so dear.
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