cover image This Light Between Us

This Light Between Us

Andrew Fukuda. Tor Teen, $17.99 (384p) ISBN 978-1-250-19238-7

When Alex Maki of Bainbridge Island, Wash., and Charlie Lévy of Paris, France, are assigned to be pen pals in 1935, Alex is initially disappointed to learn that Charlie is a girl, and neither expects to still be writing in 1941. As they’ve grown closer, the world has darkened: in Paris, discrimination against Charlie’s Jewish family gets worse; after Pearl Harbor, Alex’s Japanese-American family is interned far from their home. In an author’s note, Fukuda (the Hunt Trilogy) says that he was inspired to write the novel after learning that Anne Frank had an American pen pal and that a subcamp of Dachau was liberated by an all-Japanese-American battalion. Drawing on these facts, the author creates a compelling juxtaposition in Charlie’s and Alex’s situations. Letters between the two (and Alex’s drawings) mix with a third-person account of Alex’s time at the Manzanar internment camp and fighting in Europe with the segregated 442nd Regiment. Blending realistic details of life in battle and occupied Paris with Alex’s desperation-fueled visions of Charlie, the book offers a believable hero in shy but determined Alex and introduces new chapters into history that readers may think they know. Ages 13–up. (Jan.)