The Lost Year

by Katherine Marsh
First sentence: “Dark Beast Ganon charged.”
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Content: There is talk of starvation and the deaths of children. It’s in the YA section (grades 6-8) of the bookstore. I read this book for the Cybils, and this reflects my opinion and not that of the whole panel.

It’s spring of 2020, which means that Matthew is trapped in his home due to the COVID-19 pandemic. He’s bored out of his mind, mostly because his great-grandmother – whom they call GG – has come to live with them and his mom is super strict about not interacting with anyone because of the pandemic. He has his Switch, until his mom decides that he needs more to do than sit playing games, and tasks him with helping GG go through her stuff.

When he finds a black and white picture of her and another girl, he slowly gets GG to open up about her childhood in Ukraine and the famine that plagued the country in the early 1930s. Told in alternating voices – we hear Matthew’s story as well as Helen’s, a first-generation American immigrant – and Mila’s – the daughter of a Communist official – stories.

I really liked this one. I liked the parallels between the early days of the pandemic and the Ukranian famine of 1932/1933. I liked how Marsh made each of the three characters come alive on the page, and made the historical parts relevant to today. And even though there is conflict, as a a reader, you can see all the various perspectives. In the end, after all, we’re all just trying to survive somehow.

It’s a good story, and one I think kids who like Jennifer Nielsen or Alan Gratz will enjoy.

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