cover image A Place to Hang the Moon

A Place to Hang the Moon

Kate Albus. Holiday House/Ferguson, $17.99 (320p) ISBN 978-0-8234-4705-3

In this heartwarming debut that contains nods to British children’s classics, three orphans—heirs to a fortune—join the WWII London evacuation after the death of their forbidding grandmother leaves them guardianless. Though they seek safety from the Blitz and the possibility of finding a permanent, loving home, the siblings’ plight instead becomes precarious. At their first residence, responsible 12-year-old William, roguish 11-year-old Edmund, and earnest nine-year-old Anna encounter bullying from their foster siblings. At the next—a starkly impoverished billet with a harried mother of four—the children experience hunger, and the boys are forced to kill rats for extra funds. Happily, a friendship with their village’s warm librarian, regarded by many with suspicion because of her absent German husband, offers solace and hope to the three. Albus infuses the closely bonded siblings’ search for found family with dry humor (“Funeral receptions can be tough spots to find enjoyment”), affectionate and authentic-feeling characterization, and a plot that alludes to and aligns with the works of Enid Blyton, Frances Hodgson Burnett, and E. Nesbit. Includes a bibliography of books mentioned. Ages 9–12. [em](Feb.) [/em]