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Sunrise Over Fallujah

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Robin "Birdy" Perry, a new army recruit from Harlem, isn't quite sure why he joined the army, but he's sure where he's headed: Iraq. Birdy and the others in the Civilian Affairs Battalion are supposed to help secure and stabilize the country and successfully interact with the Iraqi people. Officially, the code name for their maneuvers is Operation Iraqi Freedom. But the young men and women in the CA unit have a simpler name for it:WAR
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from April 21, 2008
      Here it is at last—the novel that will allow American teens to grapple intelligently and thoughtfully with the war in Iraq. Robin Perry, nephew of the soldier central to Myers's Vietnam novel Fallen Angels
      , has joined up because, as he fumblingly writes to his uncle on the eve of the invasion in 2003, “I felt like crap after 9-11 and I wanted to do something, to stand up for my country.” Massing in Kuwait, assigned to a Civil Affairs unit, he finds that his motives continue to elude him as he assesses his fellow soldiers, all of whom seem tougher, braver, better directed. Even as the author exposes Robin's ambivalent feelings and doubts, he re-creates the climate of the earliest days of the war, when victory seems definable and soldiers credibly talk in March or April of being home by Christmas.
      Robin serves more as a lens on the war than as a narrator whose voice surprises or compels the reader. His comrades, too, conform to type; rather than individuals, they are representatives of characters familiar to war movies and genre fiction: the soulful musician whose awareness of irony does not stop him from heroism; the medic who defies military protocol in her humanitarianism; the tough-talking gunner—female—who quips her way through danger. In this novel, the conventions are helpful: they ground the reader. For as the Civil Affairs unit moves from a mission of winning “hearts and minds” to having to apologize for the “collateral damage” of having bombed a school and killed children in the “fog of war,” the characters realize they are in the middle of many wars, none of which they understand. Readers will get a sense of the complexities of the war, and of the ways the rank-and-file, as represented by Robin, are slowly drawn into covert or morally dubious engagement. The action builds toward a climax that is affecting despite being easily foreseen. At the end, when Robin writes his uncle one last letter, asking, “re there really enough words to make understand ,” the book itself dares readers to lift that question off the page; it is a forceful bid for their hearts and minds. Ages 12–up.

    • School Library Journal

      Starred review from April 1, 2008
      Gr 8 Up-Instead of heading to college as his father wishes, Robin leaves Harlem and joins the army to stand up for his country after 9/11. While stationed in Iraq with a war looming that he hopes will be averted, he begins writing letters home to his parents and to his Uncle Richie, the main character from Myers's acclaimed Vietnam War novel, "Fallen Angels" (Scholastic, 1988). Robin finds himself in a diverse Civil Affairs unit of both men and women, with a mission to serve as a buffer between winning over the Iraqi people and concurrent military operations. As the war unfolds, the military angle of Robin's job escalates, and he experiences increasing horrors of violence, death, destruction, insecurity, sorrow, and extreme fear. Ultimately, he comprehends the reasons Uncle Richie never wanted to talk to their family about what happened in Vietnam, saying, "]are there really enough words to make them understand?" Myers brilliantly freeze-frames the opening months of the current Iraq War by realistically capturing its pivotal moments in 2003 and creating a vivid setting. Memorable characters share instances of wry levity that balance the story without deflecting its serious tone. Through precise, believable dialogue as the catalyst, tame compared to that warranted in "Fallen Angels", Myers's expert portrayal of a soldier's feelings and perspectives at the onset of this controversial war allows the circumstances to speak for themselves."Diane P. Tuccillo, Fort Collins Regional Library District, CO"

      Copyright 2008 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      February 15, 2008
      Myers earned a Coretta Scott King award for Fallen Angels (1988), about Richie, a young, black soldier who faces confusing missions, enemies indistinguishable from civilians, and a country that resents its so-called liberators.That book dealt with Vietnam, but the same descriptionapplies tothis moving companion, set in Iraq. Narrated by Richies nephew, Robin, thisnovel plunges readers into Operation Iraqi Freedom. The violence encountered by Robins supposedly low-risk, mixed-gender Civil Affairs teamdemolishes expectations of atextbook war and leaves the recent enlisteeburdened with anxiety, as if every gunhad an eye on the end that was looking for him.Such remarks are emblematic of the spare, authentic power of Myers writing, whichrevealsboth the universal emotions of warfare and its contemporary specificsfrom embedded reportersto women warriors (one of whom experiences an attempted rape). Unfortunately, readers learn more about the situation thanabout Robin himself, whotends to be upstaged by his vibrant supporting cast. Another weak point is a melodramatic, heavily foreshadowed tragedy at the books climax.Even so, this offers a compelling, close-up look ata war that has raged for a large percentage of teens lives, and together, this novel and Fallen Angels deliver a searing statement about how the lessons of history go unheeded as the fog of war envelops generation after generation.A new paperback edition of Fallen Angelswill build interest in both books; recommenders should note thatthe language and violence in theearlier titleare markedly more graphic.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2008, American Library Association.)

    • The Horn Book

      Starred review from May 1, 2008
      Private Robin Perry joins the army during his senior year in high school because "I felt like crap after 9-11 and I wanted to do something, to stand up for my country." In February 2003 he becomes part of the initial U.S. troop deployment in the second Iraq war. His story -- told through a first-person account; honest, soul-searching letters to his uncle Richie (the protagonist of Myers's Fallen Angels, rev. 7/88); and cheerful missives to his mother -- shows a young man who starts his tour of duty optimistically, begins to wonder what the war is really about, and finally concludes that "we were in a war of complete randomness...There was no logic except the constant adding up of numbers. How many are dead?" Robin takes readers behind the headlines to the everyday life of a soldier, an existence full of fear, bravery, boredom, confusion, compassion, and violence. His voice and perspective never waver from that of a young man trying to make some sense out of his tasks and his duty. An appended glossary defines potentially unfamiliar language, but the non-political approach of the novel allows readers to create their own definitions for the central word: war.

      (Copyright 2008 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

    • The Horn Book

      July 1, 2008
      In February 2003, Private Robin Perry leaves for Iraq. His story--told through a first-person account, letters to his uncle Richie (Fallen Angels), and cheerful missives to his mother--shows the everyday life of a soldier, an existence of fear, bravery, boredom, and compassion. His voice and perspective never waver from that of a young man trying to make sense of duty. Glos.

      (Copyright 2008 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

Formats

  • Kindle Book
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  • EPUB ebook

Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:5.3
  • Lexile® Measure:780
  • Interest Level:9-12(UG)
  • Text Difficulty:3-4

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