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MAPPING THE BONES

Jane Yolen Stemple

The year is 1942, and Chaim and Gittel, Polish twins, are forced from their beautiful home and made to live in the Lodz Ghetto. Their family's cramped quarters are awful, but when even those dire circumstances become too dangerous, their parents decide to make for the nearby Lagiewniki Forest, where partisan fighters are trying to shepherd Jews to freedom in Russia. The partisans take Chaim and Gittel, with promises that their parents will catch up - but soon, everything goes wrong. Their small band of fighters is caught and killed. Chaim, Gittel, and their two friends are left alive, only to be sent off to Sobanek concentration camp.

Chaim is quiet, a poet, and the twins often communicate through wordless exchanges of shared looks and their own invented sign language. But when they reach Sobanek, with its squalid conditions, rampant disease, and a building with a belching chimney that everyone is scared to so much as look at, the bond between Chaim and Gittel, once a source of strength, becomes a burden. For there is a doctor there looking to experiment on twins, and what he has in store for them is a horror they dare not imagine.

This gut-wrenching story about the choices we make, the values we hold - and the ties that bind us all together - adds a story never told before in young adult literature to the body of work written about teens during World War II.
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Published 2018-03-01 by Philomel

Comments

Simplified Chinese: Beijing Tianlue

[...] echoes of Hansel and Gretel in Chaim and Gittel's harrowing journey are equally effective, and no less horrific. Interludes highlighting Gittel's memories and Chaim's poetry provide glimpses of hope and brightness amid the cruelties the children endure. Read more...

If you read one book by Jane Yolen every day, it would take an entire year to finish them all! MAPPING THE BONES is her 365th book. Read more...

2019 Golden Kite Award Winner Read more...