cover image We Are Wolves

We Are Wolves

Katrina Nannestad, illus. by Martina Heiduczek. Atheneum/Dlouhy, $17.99 (304p) ISBN 978-1-66590-422-3

Nannestad’s immersive WWII novel centers on the Wolfskinder—German children suddenly left to fend for themselves. In late 1944 East Prussia, 11-year-old Liesl Wolf and her seven-year-old brother, Otto, never doubt that it is “an exciting time to be German,” even when their father is called to fight for “our beloved leader.” When Papa is pronounced missing, though, and their family, along with many others, is commanded to flee the Red Army in a blizzard, confusion floods the children’s patriotism. After tragedy leaves Liesl in charge of irrepressible Otto and joyful toddler Mia, their sister, the children struggle to survive, stealing from abandoned homes, foraging, and even living with Russian soldiers. Fierce and steadfast in her care for her siblings, and determined to hold to a promise to keep them safe and together, Liesl insists they still “need to be children”: playing games, singing songs, and telling jokes even amid their desperation. As Liesl undergoes thoughtful questioning and maturation in her thinking about the war’s players, her realistic yet optimistic voice grounds the book in a spirit of integrity, generosity, and love—a sensibility that gently permeates the siblings’ bonds with one another and with others. Heiduczek’s occasional b&w art enhances the story’s dark and tender components. Ages 10–14. (Mar.)