*A National Book Award Finalist* From the author of Nowhere Boy - called "a resistance novel for our times" by The New York Times - comes a brilliant middle-grade survival story that traces a harrowing family secret back to the Holodomor, a terrible famine that devastated Soviet Ukraine in the 1930s. Thirteen-year-old Matthew is miserable. His journalist dad is stuck overseas indefinitely, and his mom has moved in his one-hundred-year-old great-grandmother to ride out the pandemic, adding to his stress and isolation. But when Matthew finds a tattered black-and-white photo in his great-grandmother's belongings, he discovers a clue to a hidden chapter of her past, one that will lead to a life-shattering family secret. Set in alternating timelines that connect the present-day to the 1930s and the US to the USSR, Katherine Marsh's latest novel sheds fresh light on the Holodomor – the horrific famine that killed millions of Ukrainians, and which the Soviet government covered up for decades.
Other Title | A Survival Story of the Ukrainian Famine (National Book Award Finalist) |
GMD | BOOK |
Language | en |
Classification | F MAR |
Publisher | Roaring Brook Press, 2023-01-17 |
Subject | Juvenile Fiction / Historical / EuropeJuvenile Fiction / Family / MultigenerationalJuvenile Fiction / Social Themes / Emigration & ImmigrationFiction / HistoricalHistoricalHistorical FictionEuropean HistorySoviet UnionHistory / Russia & the Former Soviet UnionRussian HistoryFamineUkraineSurvivalJuvenile Fiction / Action & Adventure / Survival StoriesBattle of the Books |
Description | 368 pages |
ISBN | 9781250313607 |
Additional ISBN | 1250313619 / 9781250909305 |
URL | books.google.com.hk/books?id=S-diEAAAQBAJ&hl=&source=gbs_api |