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War games : a novel based on a true story  Cover Image Book Book

War games : a novel based on a true story

Couloumbis, Audrey. (Author). Couloumbis, Akila. (Added Author).

Summary: What were once just boys' games become matters of life and death as Petros and his older brother Zola each wonder if, like their resistance-fighter cousin, they too can make a difference in a Nazi-occupied Greece.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9780375956287 (reinforced)
  • ISBN: 9780375856280 (hardcover)
  • ISBN: 9780375856297 (pbk.)
  • ISBN: 037595628X (reinforced)
  • ISBN: 0375856285 (hardcover)
  • ISBN: 0375856293 (pbk.)
  • Physical Description: print
    232 p. : ill ; 22 cm.
  • Edition: 1st ed.
  • Publisher: New York : Random House, c2009.

Content descriptions

Study Program Information Note:
Accelerated Reader/Renaissance Learning MG 4.7 7
Awards Note:
A Junior Library Guild selection
Subject: World War, 1939-1945 -- Underground movements -- Greece -- Juvenile fiction
Greece -- History -- Occupation, 1941-1944 -- Juvenile fiction
Brothers -- Juvenile fiction
Cousins -- Juvenile fiction
World War, 1939-1945 -- Underground movements -- Greece -- Fiction
Greece -- History -- Occupation, 1941-1944 -- Fiction
Brothers -- Fiction
Cousins -- Fiction

Available copies

  • 2 of 2 copies available at Sitka.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 0 total copies.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Holdable? Status Due Date
Trail and District Public Library Main Branch JF COU (Text) 35110000423679 Children's Fiction Volume hold Available -
Williams Lake Branch PB J COU (Text) 33923004733675 Juvenile Paperbacks Volume hold Available -

  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2009 October #1
    "Audrey Couloumbis, a Newbery Honor winner for Getting Near to Baby (1999), creates a fictionalized account of a story from her husband, Akila's, childhood. Twelve-year-old Petros has little memory of life in America since the family moved back to Greece when he was an infant. But he knows that his family must hide any ties they have with America and appear to be simple Greeks interested only in tending to their farm when the German army begins its occupation in 1941. At first he thinks it's all very adventurous, helping his older brother undermine the Nazis, but the dear price of war quickly becomes apparent to him. The drama is lifelike, which is to say it carries a sense of boyhood authenticity, but is, at the same time, somewhat unfocused. Readers with a bit of patience and inquisitiveness will likely get the most out of this story, which eventually becomes quite exciting and affecting; more passive readers may find it easy to lose the thread. An interesting addition to World War II fiction that ventures into a relatively unexplored corner of Greece." Copyright 2009 Booklist Reviews.
  • Horn Book Guide Reviews : Horn Book Guide Reviews 2010 Spring
    A Nazi colonel moves into the house of Petros, twelve, and Zola, fifteen. Zola, defiant, coordinates distribution of secret messages; Petros, under cover of feigned play, assists the resistance fighter hiding in the family's well. Akila Couloumbis's memories come alive with details of Greek village life, an authentic stage for vivid characters who must navigate conflicting loyalties to establish viable wartime roles. Copyright 2010 Horn Book Magazine Reviews.
  • Horn Book Magazine Reviews : Horn Book Magazine Reviews 2009 #6
    Like their father and uncle before them, Petros, twelve, and Zola, fifteen, are prone to quarrel. World War II -- as Italian invaders of Greece are supplanted by harder-edged Germans -- only fuels the brothers' competition. While foreigners flee their mountain village, Petros's family conceals evidence that they previously lived in the United States; they speak only Greek, now, and destroy all their American possessions. Zola, defiant, enlists younger boys in distributing secret messages; but when a Nazi colonel moves into their house, the boys realize how serious their games have become. Luckily the colonel tells Papa that "wars should be fought among men, not boys...Even in war, boys play." Ironically, this kindly belief enables Petros, under cover of feigned play, to assist the heroic resistance fighter (a cousin) who's hiding in the family well. Akila Couloumbis's wartime memories come alive with details of daily village life, from gardens to goats -- an authentic stage for vivid characters who must navigate secrets, rivalries, and conflicting loyalties in order to establish viable wartime roles. The easily read narrative, lively with dialogue, ends with a symbolic triumph (the launching of a kite the boys have made from a Greek flag). Meanwhile, by clarifying priorities and loyalties, the hostilities precipitate reconciliation among the various brothers. A gripping story that's also a fine introduction to a complex time. Copyright 2009 Horn Book Magazine Reviews.
  • Kirkus Reviews : Kirkus Reviews 2009 September #1
    When the Nazis take over their small town in 1941 Greece, 12-year-old Petros and his family must keep a dangerous secret: The children, born in America, would be targeted by the Germans, though it is never made clear exactly why. Although Petros asks his father, "Why is it so bad to be American?" the answer is elided, keeping readers as mystified as Petros himself. When the Nazi commander comes to live in their house and a cousin active in the underground returns to town, the tension becomes palpable. Based on Akila Couloumbis's (husband of co-author Audrey) life, this understated novel puts readers right in the middle of a Nazi occupation, with little movie-style high drama but a sure sense of what it was really like—the desire to get on with everyday life, the unease, the secrets and the quiet acts of defiance in the face of life-threatening circumstances. A fine introduction to an important aspect of World War II and to the spirit of resistance the times required. (author's note) (Historical fiction. 8-12) Copyright Kirkus 2009 Kirkus/BPI Communications.All rights reserved.
  • Library Media Connection : Library Media Connection Reviews 2009 November/December
    Give me an unusual or overlooked perspective on World War II and I will pay attention. This book covers the Greek perspective of the German presence in Greece in 1941. For Petros the war feels unreal and far away, but overnight everything changes and suddenly the war is all too real. The story is based on actual events in the life of the author?s husband. As a reviewer and as a Greek, I found that this story invigorated the idea of resistance and sabotage during the war. The Greeks were as stubborn and temperamental as the goat that becomes a symbol of obstruction in the novel. Factually, Greek resistance was first displayed by one of the elite soldiers who were the guardians of the flag that flies over the Acropolis, when a German ordered the soldier to remove the flag. The command was obeyed, but the soldier wrapped himself in the flag and leapt from the wall of the ancient fortress to his death. This title and its cast of memorable characters show another point of view on World Wa II. Highly Recommended. Constance G. Pappas, Teacher-Librarian, Skyridge Middle School, Camas, Washington ¬ 2009 Linworth Publishing, Inc.
  • Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 2009 October #4

    Newbery Honor–winning author Audrey Couloumbis (Getting Near to Baby) collaborates with her husband, Akila, to tell a story inspired by his family history in Greece during WWII. Twelve-year-old Petros and his older brother, Zola, live in the small town of Amphissa. Their rural life is interrupted when Nazis invade and a German commander takes up residence in their home. The family fears that their ties to America (the boys' father ran a store there, but they returned to Greece when it went bankrupt) will make them a target, and they hide all signs (such as American toys and clothing) that they are anything but an ordinary Greek family. Inspired by the courage of their cousin Lambros, a soldier who has escaped capture, Petros finds his own ways to contribute, including helping drop notes to spread war news; he also has an uneasy relationship with the German commander, who is something of a supportive presence but still the enemy. The Couloumbises craft a poignant and plainspoken account of the everyday impacts of a vast war and the importance of small victories. Ages 8–12. (Oct.)

    [Page 58]. Copyright 2009 Reed Business Information.
  • School Library Journal Reviews : SLJ Reviews 2009 October

    Gr 5–8—In 1941, when Germans occupy their small Greek town and the commandant comes to live in their house, 12-year-old Petros and his family hide their American connections and an escaping Greek resistance fighter as well. Based on Akila Couloumbis's wartime recollections, this novel is a grand read: an adventure full of the particulars of boys' play, and an unusual perspective on World War II lives. From the opening bird-shooting contest, it is clear that for Petros, his older brother, and his friends, these games will also be life-or-death matters. The suspense mounts as first they wait for the Germans, then for the commandant, and finally for a time when their cousin Lambros can move on. Details of farm life are woven naturally into the third-person narrative, with just enough explanation for readers to imagine their way into that world. The authors maintain the boy's perspective, including his conflicting feelings about the German corporal who encourages his play but represents the detested enemy. Realistic family dynamics include sibling rivalries stretching on into adulthood. The climactic violence is believable, and the resolution—though it takes place offstage—is deeply satisfying. Memorable.—Kathleen Isaacs, Children's Literature Specialist, Pasadena, MD

    [Page 124]. Copyright 2008 Reed Business Information.
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