Sunday, August 5, 2012

A Shirtful of Frogs by Shalini Boland

1940 - Twins Jimmy and Patrick Sweeney, 6, have the idea of selling the frogs they have caught to the other kids in their East End, London neighborhood, but as the war continues, evacuation to the country with 3 other of their 11 siblings puts end to their frog enterprise.  Unfortunately, when they reach the village they are evacuated to, Jimmy and Patrick are taken by separate families, as are siblings Jeanie, Irene and Bobby.  It is Mrs. Cribbins who takes Jimmy and she doesn't seem very nice right from the start.

2012 -  Nathan Pepper, 12, isn't too happy about moving from London to a small village in the country because of his dad's new job, especially since it doesn't seem to have a skateboard park anywhere.  And it doesn't help that the first night in his new house, Nathan wakes up suddenly, hearing a strange noise.  Creeped out, he nevertheless decides to see what it is.  Going up the stairs to another bedroom, Nathan can hear distinct crying but even stranger, when he opens the door, the bedroom is completely changed - no longer neat, clean and shiny, now it was a dirty, dusty attic with a little boy under a thin blanket sobbing for his mum.

Jimmy's life with the Cribbins family is much worse than expected.  He sleeps in a lonely, dark attic, he does most of the chores in the house, and than he is sent outside, not allowed back in the house til evening.  And he isn't fed much either, so now he was starving.  Nathan brings him some cake, but when Mrs. Cribbins finds somes crumbs in Jimmy's bed, he is accused of stealing their food and is given no breakfast.

Totally baffled, Nathan continues to go upstairs at night to find Jimmy again, but to no avail.

Meantime, in 2012, Nathan starts at his new school and things begin to look up for him as he makes friends and finds fellow skateboarders; and in 1940, Jimmy begins school, too, but only after doing his chores.  And, though the two Cribbins children ride the bus, Jimmy is made to walk the long distance to school. He no sooner arrives and he is picked on by a group of boys resentful of evacuees.  While two hold him down, another boy, Frank, takes an industrial staple gun from behind the school and staples Jimmy's back.  The only good part of that day is that Jimmy discovers that his twin, Patrick, is at the school, too.

That night, Nathan is able to visit Jimmy again in the upstairs bedroom and once more, he brings the starving, now injured little boy some food.

But can Nathan help Jimmy across the years?  In the autumn, he is able to visit Jimmy fairly often, bringing him food and company, but as winter begins, it becomes more difficult.  Nathan's concern for Jimmy is really peaked when he sees a picture of the twins boys in a newspaper article about the village's evacuees.  And later, in another article, he learns that Jimmy has died from malnutrition.  To make matters worse, Nathan's Aunty Miranda comes to stay indefinitely in the upstairs bedroom, and he fears he won't be able to see and help Jimmy before it is too late.  So, Nathan decides that desperate times call for desperate measures and he hatches a really stinky plan to drive his Aunty M out of that room and into another.  But, can a stinky plan succeed?

Shalini Boland based A Shirtful of Frogs on the real experiences of her father-in-law, Paul Boland, who was evacuated with his twin Peter at the age of 5.  And in writing his story, she has brought attention to this important, yet disturbing and sad aspect of evacuation.   Most of us probably think that the people who took in the WWII evacuees from London were such kind, caring, concerned people, sometimes strict but not abusive. But actually that wasn't always the case.  Kids like Paul Boland/Jimmy Sweeney were abused, starved and used as free servants while the people they lived with collected the government money meant for their care, and used it for their own family's benefit.

Boland says she created Nathan to give Jimmy a needed friend in this well-written time-slip story, but of course, that doesn't happen in real life.  A Shirtful of Frogs is, in effect, a wonderful tribute to Boland's father-in-law and all the children who suffered the way Paul/Jimmy did when their parents trustingly sent them off to live with strangers in what they believed would be relative safety.

This book is recommended for readers age 9+
This book was sent to me by the author

Click here to enter a Goodreads Giveaway in progress until October 31, 2012 for a signed copy of A Shirtful of Frogs open to US, CA and GB residents.

This trailer for A Shirtful of Frogs is interesting both for the book's promotion and for its use of public domain actual footage:


Marvelous Middle-Grade Monday is a weekly event hosted by Shannon Messenger


14 comments:

  1. I have never heard of a Shirt Full of Frogs- but I love the idea behind it. I am intrigued by the connection between the two boys. My heart goes out to Jimmy and other evacuees- because it must have been heartbreaking to be separated from parents and siblings. You did an excellent job telling us what this book is about and I am thrilled to get to enter the contest. Not only would I like this book, but it would be perfect for my HF unit at the end of the year. :)

    Thanks!

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    1. I thought the connection between the boys was very nice, too and this would be a perfect book for you HF unit. There are some great descriptions of life in England during the war and how it feels to be separated from everyone.

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  2. It's tragic to be torn apart from your family. Poor Jimmy! Hope Nathan's stinky plan works. This is the first time I've heard of the term 'timeslip' ~ how interesting!

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    1. I agree it must have been so hard to be evacuated and to have to live with strangers who don't know you. Timeslip - not really sure where I picked that up from either since sometimes I use it and other times I use time travel. Odd that, isn't it?

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  3. Wow, this sounds incredible! Mys sister's mother in law was evacuated from Germany in the Kindertransport, but ended up with a very kind family who basically adopted her. Her parents survived the Holocaust but she didn't see them for many years. But some Kindertransport kids were abused and exploited too.

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    1. Your sister's mother in law was so lucky, sometimes I think the Kindertransport kids have such a hard time of it. My mother's best friend was a Kindertransport kid and she was also lucky, but she remembered kids who weren't so lucky. I always knew that kids were abused in some evacuation situtation, but this is the first book I have come across that covers it.

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  4. That's a beautiful cover, and what an evocative title.

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    1. Yes, the cover is beautiful, although it makes the little boy look so vulnerable against the threat of the planes when it really wasn't the German bombers who wre his real threat. And it does make you wonder where the frogs come in, doesn't it?

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  5. I've been reading a lot of time slip this weekend {past}. Will add this to my list--because you know it can never get too big! Thanks for sharing this one and welcome to MMGM!

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    1. Thanks, I have been wanting to contribute to MMGM for a while and hope to regularly do that in the future. I know - that list can really keep growing but that is ok, sooner or later they all get read.

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  6. One for me to read...though it sounds awfully sad and will probably make me go squeeze my own boys until they squeak.

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    1. Yes, I would say this is one for you, and while ite is sad, it is also funny and hopeful and poignant, though you may still want to give your boys a good squeeze.

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  7. I appreciate how you are able to provide the summary clearly, what with this story being a timeslip adventure. What makes this story doubly poignant is the fact that it is actually based on a real life story. I hope to read this one, too.

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  8. This reminded me of another of my favourite stories – Tom’s midnight garden – not the story so much, but the timeslip element. Off to enter the Goodreads giveaway now, thanks for the link.

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