![]() ![]() I thought I was reading straightforward historical fiction, and then Ms. I’m not opposed to ghost stories, but there was something about this one that just didn’t grab me. It was the ghost dog part that I didn’t like. ![]() ![]() ![]() The dog named Bear manages to save the lives of both Denny and Billie’s new friend, Tito, in an eerie sort of out-of-body or teleportation mechanism that I didn’t totally understand or buy. The link is a stray dog that Denny finds and brings to Billie to take care of. Code Word Courage links a young girl, Billie, whose brother Leo is in the Marines, with Leo’s friend, Denny, who is Navajo and becomes a code talker. Not that this new book by Kirby Larson, in her Dogs of World War II series, is bad. Because of his ethnic background and fluency in the Navajo language, Ned is given a special assignment that tests his commitment, patriotism, and endurance. In that book, a Navajo boy, Ned Begay, hears about the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, disguises his age, and joins the Marines. First of all, if your middle grade reader wants to read a story about the Navajo code talkers of World War II, I would suggest Code Talker: A Novel About the Navajo Marines of World War Two by Joseph Bruchac. ![]()
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