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When teenager Ann Fay takes over as "man of the house" for her absent soldier father, she struggles to keep the family and herself together in the face of personal tragedy and the 1940s polio epidemic in North Carolina.

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7 reviews
Reviewed by Julie M. Prince for TeensReadToo.com

Ann Fay Honeycutt is only thirteen, but she's already the man of the house. This is thanks to her daddy leaving to fight in the war against Hitler and leaving his blue overalls for Ann Fay to fill.

Trying to keep the wisteria she loves from choking the vegetable garden she's been charged to tend is nearly a full-time job, and that's without counting the extra work of taking care of her baby brother and twin sisters.

Ann Fay thinks these will be her greatest challenges while her daddy is off at war. But then a polio epidemic hits their hometown of Hickory, North Carolina, and Ann Fay learns what real challenge is.

This is a remarkable story of courage and of a spirit that cannot be broken. The show more flowing language this author uses is just gorgeous, and the voice of Ann Fay is as unique as they come. I stayed up late to read the next chapter and then the next -- one of the highest compliments I can give a book. show less
"Blue" is a lovely, extraordinary small book that is both heart-warming and historical. Written about the Great Hickory, NC Polio Epidemic of 1944, during WWII, the story involves a sweet, naive family whose father has gone off to war and who are left to carry on in a harsh and inprotected environment for which they are ill-equipped. They are a little band made up of a young mother, a 13 yr. old, twin elementary school aged little girls and a pre-school aged boy. All of this little family live mostly on the land, have very little meat, and they can wild berries and their own garden vegetables for the winter.

The eldest daughter, Ann Fay, is given a set of overalls and instructions by her dad to be the "man of the house" while he's show more away...a daunting task for any child. It is Ann Fay who takes on the burden of guilt when her baby brother is struck down with polio, and when she is also taken with polio and removed from her family responsibilities.

Blue" has won a bushelful of impressive awards for children's literature. It is a very special book. However, its beauty makes it a most worthy read for adults and those who enjoy YA fiction, as well.

Having a mother who was a polio patient in Hickory, NC, during this same epidemic in 1944, made me especially interested in this book! Although it's a fiction novel, Ms Hostetter recounts the particulars of the disease, the hospital-like facilities, and the therapies as my own mother recalls them. So, there is much truth to her fiction.

The book is also a moral tale. So much of the simple values and morality of a common way of living in the South are protrayed in "Blue." The faith that uplifts all of her friends and relatives in Ann Fay's community are deeply moving. These values and the quiet, simple ways of living still linger in this region of NC, today.

I recommend this book without reservation to those who love a historic novel, YA fiction, and all readers of medical history.
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Set in 1944 Hickory, North Carolina, Blue is the story of Ann Fay, left to wear the overalls in the family when her father goes off to the European warfront. With three younger siblings and her mother to look out for, Ann Fay has her work cut out for her. When polio strikes her little brother, Ann Fay is wracked with guilt and grief. When she also succumbs to the disease, Ann Fay spends months in a racially mixed emergency ward and begins to question the segregation that she has always taken for granted. An author’s note at the end explains the important part that Hickory, NC, played in the 1944 polio epidemic, the history of polio treatment, and the research and writing process that brought the book to life. Although the dialects do show more not always ring true and Ann Fay retains a mysterious ability to write letters throughout her affliction, the story is engaging and, at times, heartwrenching. Keep a hanky nearby for this recommended middle school title. show less
Ann Fay is left to be the "man of the house" when her father goes off to fight in World War II. She lives just outside of Hickory, N.C., and during the summer, a dreadful polio epidemic hits the western portion of the state, with Hickory as it's focal point. The book rather smoothly covers a wide variety of issues... war, polio epidemic, and racial relations of the era being the main three. First Ann Fay's little brother comes down with polio and is taken off to the temporary hospital set up in Hickory*. Later Ann Fay herself comes down with the disease, and ends up meeting the first black girl she's ever encountered personally as a fellow patient in the contagious ward of the hospital.

*The Miracle of Hickory is the hospital setting of show more large portions of the book, and is real. When the epidemic hit, the people of Hickory came together and in three days built a temporary hospital which at it's peak had over 200 patients. show less
This is an absolutely wonderful book. I fell in love with
When 13 year old Ann Fay's father goes off to fight in WWII, she must help out with the family. But a polio epidemic hits her town, and first her brother and then she is struck down and hospitalized. While in hospital she learns about the inequalities black people must suffer when she is separated from her sick friend.

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7 Works 494 Members

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Common Knowledge

Original publication date
2006
People/Characters
Ann Fay Honeycutt
Important places
Miracle of Hickory (Hickory, North Carolina, USA)
Important events
World War II
Dedication
For Chuck, who said something to the effect of "Sure, go ahead and give up a predictable salary to follow your writing dreams."

Every writer should be so blessed!
First words
If you ask folks around here what they remember about the year 1944,

A child might say, "That was the year my daddy went off to fight Hitler."
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)It mostly hurts at first. After a while it starts to feel better.

Classifications

Genres
Kids, Tween, Fiction and Literature, Children's Books
DDC/MDS
462LanguageSpanish, Portuguese, GalicianEtymology of standard Spanish
LCC
PZ7 .H81125 .BLanguage and LiteratureFiction and juvenile belles lettresFiction and juvenile belles lettresJuvenile belles lettres
BISAC

Statistics

Members
258
Popularity
124,965
Reviews
6
Rating
(4.21)
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
6
ASINs
1