I’ve enjoyed several of these shorter books featuring World War II veterans and their memories. They would be terrific gifts even for high schoolers.
The Author
After interviewing 250 WWII vets during the past decade, Kayleen Reusser, a 25-year writing professional, has written several books about those veterans and the war, as well as many stories about veterans in magazines and newspapers. She is a military spouse/mother.
After completing a 10-day WWII Tour of Europe, Reusser has put together a talk with photos of places vets served, including Omaha Beach, a foxhole in Belgium used during the Battle of the Bulge, Paris, Hitler’s retreat called Eagle’s Nest, Dachau, etc. She has spoken to dozens of groups of all ages.
A former middle school librarian, Reusser has written 17 non-fiction books for that age group for Mitchell Lane and Purple Toad Publishing. Titles include biographies on Meghan Markle and Nobel Peace Prize winner Malala; STEM books on Big Ben and Golden Gate Bridge, Indonesian and Cuban cookbooks, and 3 books on Greek mythology.
I especially liked these short books:
My thoughts: During WWII, 120,000 Americans were held as POWs, in Europe and in the Pacific. A devastating 40 percent of the ones held by the Japanese died in captivity–from cruelty, diseases, malnourishment, even killings.
After some background about the war, there are stories about two foot soldiers, one navyman, and five airmen. The airmen were POWs of the Nazis, the other two prisoners of the Japanese. The timeline of the war is at the end of the book.
The author interviewed seven former POWs for these stories, and was given access to the journal of another. These are important stories to contemplate, to remember. One man lied about his age, entering the army when he was only 15. Even when he was released after 41 months, he was still a teenager.
There are compelling Book Club Questions at the end, which would also be good for a high school history class to contemplate. Kayleen Reusser’s short books of stories of WWII veterans would be fine additions to school and other libraries. History through the eyes of those who lived it.
My thoughts: I wish I’d had books like Kayleen Reusser’s Witnesses of War Books when I was a schoolgirl. As an adult, I finally discovered that history is people. In this heartwarming slim book, there are stories of eighteen people who witnessed WWII as a child or young adult–everything from being whisked out of London’s nightly bombing raids by Germans in Operation Pied Piper to fleeing from Germans and Russians becoming refugees.
Accompanied by several photos, some by the survivors themselves, two stories are about Resistance Fighters. One girl became a WREN working with top secret codes at Bletchley Park. Another was trapped in rubble with younger siblings after a bombing. Most of the stories have ties to the State of Indiana, but any school children would get a good idea of what it was like to be a child during wartime, and how it affected these individuals as adults.
The book includes Discussion Questions and a World War II Timeline, as do other books in this delightful series.
My thoughts: This short book is packed with background history of the war and of D-Day, then begins introducing the stories of seventeen veterans she interviewed for the book. Their sketches begin with a chapter on Fighting on the Ground and continue through one about a chaplain, the inventor of the “Higgins boats,” Fighting in the Air, a POW, Treating the Injured, etc. Several National Archives photos are used in the book, as well as personal ones of the veterans themselves. Toward the end of the book or photos of several of the men recently, holding framed medals and photos or memorabilia and comments about the war.
The last chapters give More Facts about D-Day, a timeline of WWII, and a D-Day Glossary. The Author’s Reflections of D-Day and Normandy are from traveling to Normandy and other war sites. Kathleen Reusser has preserved important history for the rest of us, including the memories of veterans who lived it.
This is her latest, Women of WWII Coloring Book, which is only $5 on Amazon.
Kayleen Reusser has longer WWII books, also. Check out her Amazon Author Page.
