Imagen del autor

Marsha Forchuk Skrypuch

Autor de Making Bombs for Hitler

31 Obras 2,424 Miembros 48 Reseñas 2 Preferidas

Sobre El Autor

Créditos de la imagen: taken by Orest Skrypuch March 2021

Series

Obras de Marsha Forchuk Skrypuch

Making Bombs for Hitler (2012) 764 copias
Stolen Girl (2010) 382 copias
The War Below (2018) 192 copias
Don't Tell the Nazis (2017) 172 copias
Winterkill (2022) 107 copias
Traitors Among Us (2021) 106 copias
Trapped in Hitler's Web (2020) 103 copias
A Christmas to Remember: Tales of Comfort and Joy (2009) — Contribuidor — 56 copias
Daughter of War (2008) 45 copias
Silver Threads (1996) 36 copias
Hope's War (2001) 27 copias
The Best Gifts (1998) 26 copias
Aram's Choice (2006) 22 copias
Nobody's Child (2003) 21 copias
The Hunger (2002) 18 copias
Dance of the Banished (2015) 16 copias
Call Me Aram (2008) 16 copias
When Mama Goes to Work (2013) 16 copias
Enough (1614) 16 copias
Underground Soldier (2014) 14 copias
Don't Tell the Enemy (2017) 10 copias
Best Gifts (2013) 4 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Nombre canónico
Skrypuch, Marsha Forchuk
Fecha de nacimiento
1954-12-12
Género
female
Nacionalidad
Canada
Lugar de nacimiento
Brantford, Ontario, Canada
Lugares de residencia
Brantford, Ontario, Canada
Educación
University of Western Ontario (B.A., English|MSL)
Ocupaciones
children's book author
young adult writer
librarian
historical novelist
book reviewer
Biografía breve
Marsha Forchuk Skrypuch was born in Brantford, Ontario, to a Ukrainian-Canadian family.
In elementary school, she couldn't read, and so had to repeat the fourth grade. She had a learning disability, which was undiagnosed, and taught herself to read in the school library.
During high school, she wrote for the school newspaper. She received a B.A. with honors in English in 1978 and later a Master of Library Science degree from the University of Western Ontario. In between, she worked as an industrial sales rep. While she was studying for her master's degree, she started to explore her Ukrainian cultural background. She wrote book reviews for the Brantford Expositor for a few years before beginning to write fiction. Her debut picture book, Silver Threads, was published in 1996.

Skrypuch is the author of more than 20 books for children and young adults. Her carefully researched historical fiction and narrative nonfiction focuses on refugees and war from a young person’s perspective.

Miembros

Reseñas

Devastating but so important.
My Grandparents were just a little older than Nyl when they lived through the Holodomor. My Grandfather left his home so there would be one less mouth to feed and he lost track of a lot of his family. Unsurprisingly, he didn't talk much about this time, but it shouldn't be forgotten. I got this book for my nephews so they can understand the tragedy and the courage of their great grandparents.
 
Denunciada
ChariseH | May 25, 2024 |
 
Denunciada
BooksInMirror | otra reseña | Feb 19, 2024 |
A well done exploration of the life of a child slave laborer in the latter half of World War II. I don't normally read this genre (I get that the Nazis were despicable, and don't enjoy messing with my emotions), but was intrigued by the idea of tampering with the Nazi bombs. This turned out to be a very minor part of the book though. I appreciated that the author portrayed a realistic account of the horrors of being a Nazi prisoner, but didn't go over the top either. There were times where a sentence or two would communicate everything it needed to, and if you managed to miss that you could move on. For example, if I tracked the time correctly, I think the majority of 1944 was spent as a prisoner in worse than the labor camp. But very little page time was given to it. I also appreciated that it gave a (though necessarily much abbreviated) conclusion over a few months and then suddenly years as a refugee before neatly wrapping up. The post-Allied-arrival period is not a period I normally hear about.

I'm going to disagree with a few tags and reviews. This isn't a book about the Holocaust. There is a Jewish character, but she keeps that identity hidden. There are various types of prisoners for various reasons, but it's not because they're Jews. This isn't a concentration camp. It's a work camp. They're here to be useful and forcibly help the Nazi war effort. I appreciated this. The concentration camp story has been well told. But the plight of Ukrainian children being traumatized both by the Soviets and then the Nazis and then again by the Soviets (there's a late plot about whether it's safe to go home to Ukraine or not) is a less told tale.
… (más)
½
 
Denunciada
ojchase | 16 reseñas más. | Feb 5, 2024 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
31
Miembros
2,424
Popularidad
#10,583
Valoración
4.1
Reseñas
48
ISBNs
143
Idiomas
3
Favorito
2

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