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by Michelle Magorian

Paperback, 1987

Status

Available

Call number

823

Publication

Puffin Books (1987), 384 pages

Description

Sent to America from England at age seven to escape war-torn England, Rusty returns five years later to go to a strict English boarding school and renew her relationship with her family, who now seem like strangers to her.

User reviews

LibraryThing member dowsabella
‘Virginia’, a nicely brought-up little girl, who was learning what a female’s role was in 1930s Britain, was evacuated to the States for five years during World War 2. ‘Rusty’ came back, independent, capable of sawing and chopping firewood, using slang and not afraid to speak her mind,
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uninhibited in a way some thought shocking - and not prepared to be a ‘nice young 1930s lady’. This book tells her story - one of rebellion, disobedience, courage, desperation, loneliness, caring ...

It also involves her mother, no longer a quiet housewife but a skilled and well-respected mechanic, a skill which saves the day more than once and in more than one way; her mother’s stuck-in-the-past, manipulative, control-freak mother-in-law; her father (a ‘mummy’s boy’) back from fighting; and assorted friends.

This book tells of the way the characters try to adjust to post-war England, and the enormous social changes.
Some of them are successful, but not all.
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LibraryThing member delphica
(#22 in the 2008 Book Challenge)

This is an older kidlit title -- I've had this thing for the past year or two where I'm focused on novels and non-fiction accounts of the children who were evacuated from Britain to the US during WWII, based on a conversation that was going on with the Betsy-Tacy
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group. Kidlit fans may recall that Magorian is probably best known for the five-Kleenex Goodnight, Mr. Tom. In this book, Rusty, our heroine, has returned to England after living in Connecticut for most of the war years, and has a variety of difficulties adjusting to her "new" life -- feeling estranged from her mother, not being recognized by her little brother, having not suffered the rationing and shortages along with her UK peers, and generally acting too Americanized to fit in. She has a miserable time at boarding school, until she discovers how to sneak out of her dormitory and go exploring at night. The plot is snappy, if none too profound, and it's a nice look at the details of home life immediately following the war. One odd thing, which I think comes of this book having first been published in the 1980s, is that the author has stridently included robust mentions of menstruating and bathroom use. They don't have anything at all to do with the plot, it's that thing from the 1970s and early 80s where writers for young adult audiences felt the need to hammer home the point that there is NOTHING SHAMEFUL about menstruating or using the bathroom. Now of course, it just seems jarring.

Grade: B- This is a serviceable book, but nothing about the writing makes it stand out.
Recommended: It is interesting, I think, for its subject matter of the returning evacuee, but even in this limited genre there are other books that do it better.
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LibraryThing member NRTurner
I listened to a BBC radio dramatisation (unabridged I believe) with a dozen voice actors.
When Rusty Dickinson returns to England from the United States where she was evacuated for safekeeping while the United Kingdom was being bombed by the Luftwaffe in World War II, she is dismayed by the stiff
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reserved and proper expectations which jar with her casual extrovert American lifestyle.

I loved the fish-out-of-water comedy (or tragedy) of manners which ensues when a bright extrovert child confronts stuffy somnolent adults.
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Awards

WAYRBA: Western Australia Young Readers Book Award (Winner — Older Readers — 1987)
Best Fiction for Young Adults (Selection — 1984)

Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

1985

Physical description

384 p.; 5.08 inches

ISBN

0140319077 / 9780140319071

Barcode

543
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