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Reviews
"In this picture book, Collins sensitively examines the impact of war on the very young, using her own family history as a template. Suzy is the youngest of four children—Proimos draws her with impossibly big, questioning blue eyes and a mass of frizzy red hair—and she is struggling to understand the changes in her family. "My dad has to go to something called a war," she explains. "It's in a place called Viet Nam. Where is Viet Nam? He will be gone a year. How long is a year? I don't know what anybody's talking about." When Suzy learns that her father is in the jungle, she imagines something akin to the setting of her favorite cartoon (Collins suggests it's George of the Jungle). As the months wear on, though, Suzy begins to piece together the danger her father is in, whether it's through the increasingly unnerving postcards he sends (one reads, "Pray for me," in closing) or by catching a snippet of wartime violence on the news. "Explosions. Helicopters. Guns. Soldiers lie on the ground. Some of them aren't moving." In four wordless spreads, Proimos makes Suzy's awakening powerfully clear, as the gray jungle she initially pictured (populated by four smiling, brightly colored animals) gives way to a more violent vision, as the animals morph into weapons of war. Just when Suzy's confusion and fear reach an apex: "Then suddenly my dad's home." As in Collins's Hunger Games books, the fuzzy relationship between fear and bravery, and the reality of combat versus an imagined (or, in the case of those books, manufactured) version of it is at the forefront of this story. By the final pages, Suzy has come to understand that "Some things have changed but some things will always be the same." It's a deceptively simple message of reassurance that readers who may currently be in Suzy's situation can take to heart, whether their loved ones return changed, as hers did, or don't return at all. Ages 4–up."
--Publishers Weekly, STARRED REVIEW
"Suzanne Collins' autobiographical picture book, Year of the Jungle: Memories from the Home Front, seems a sharp departure for the author of The Hunger Games, the best-selling dystopian trilogy. But in a reassuring and deceptively simple way, Jungle, aimed at readers 4 and up, continues Collins' exploration of the effect of war and violence on kids. In Hunger Games, for readers 12 and up, teens are forced to kill or be killed as part of state-sponsored entertainment. In Collins' first fantasy series, the Underland Chronicles, for readers 8 and up, two kids fall into an underground world on the brink of war. Jungle (Scholastic), illustrated by James Proimos,is narrated by Suzy, a frizzy-haired, big-eyed first grader whose dad is sent "to something called a war" in a "place called Viet Nam." Suzy confesses, "I don't know what anybody's talking about." When she hears Vietnam is a jungle, she thinks of a cartoon set in a jungle where elephants and apes pal around. Reality intrudes when Suzy accidentally sees a TV news report from Vietnam with explosions, guns and soldiers on the ground. "Some of them aren't moving," she reports. Her worst fears are conveyed without words, just Proimos' paintings. Suzy's dad returns home, just as Collins' own dad, an Air Force officer, did in 1968. Collins offers no moralizing on war, just a vivid reminder of what it's like to be young and innocent in a world that's not. I can see a lot of kids whose parents are in someplace called Afghanistan — or another confusing place — identifying with Suzy."
--USA Today, Bob Minzesheimer, 3 1/2 OUT OF 4 STARS
When young Suzy's father leaves for Vietnam, she struggles to understand what this means for her and her family. What is the jungle like? Will her father be safe? When will he return? The months slip by, marked by the passing of the familiar holidays and the postcards that her father sends. With each one, he feels more and more distant, until Suzy isn't sure she'd even recognize her father anymore.
Awards
A PUBLISHERS WEEKLY BEST BOOK OF 2013:
PICTURE BOOK
65TH ANNUAL CHRISTOPHER AWARD FOR BOOKS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE
2014 CAPITOL CHOICES NOTEWORTHY TITLES FOR CHILDREN AND TEENS
A BOOKLIST EDITORS' CHOICE, 2013
2014 CHARLOTTE ZOLOTOW AWARD / HONOR BOOK
A NEW YORK TIMES EDITORS' CHOICE
A BULLETIN OF THE CENTER FOR CHILDREN'S BOOKS BLUE RIBBON BOOK FOR 2013
A 2014 GRYPHON HONOR BOOK
CCBC CHOICES 2014
BOOK LINKS LASTING CONNECTION FOR 2013
HUFFINGTON POST BEST PICTURE BOOKS OF 2013
MOST POWERFUL--HONORABLE MENTION
THE GUARDIAN/THE OBSERVER BEST PICTURE BOOKS FOR CHILDREN, 2013
A PARENTS' CHOICE SILVER HONOR AWARD RECIPIENT 2013
OPPENHEIM TOY PORTFOLIO PLATINUM AWARD WINNER 2013