Within the past decade a new category of book as made an appearance — the self-published graphic novel. A variety of criteria may be involved: narrative quality, art, ac- curacy and the age of its creator. <em>Keeping My Hope</em> is a graphic novel of historical fiction and great empathy. The young author says that he started out writing <em>Keeping My Hope</em> just for himself, to organize and detail the knowledge that he had gained from his research and reading. He did a fine job. It begins with an elderly grandfather trying to tell his story to one of his younger grandchildren, the older ones possibly having already heard it told by him. The old man revisits his happy childhood in Poland where sports drew children of both the Jewish and Christian religions together for a while, until the Nazi invasion. The story of the Holocaust including the camps, the terror and the cruelty of their German guards is told with emotion. This young artist-author becomes, in a sense, the main character, Ari, a boy not much older than himself. A different religion, a different country, but for the luck of the draw (no pun intended), why not himself? Why not, indeed? His identification with the injustice and horror of the situation is so strong that the author cannot let it go. He relives it, identifying with one of the Jewish prisoners who is about to be killed, but that person must be saved because the young author cannot allow this final sacrifice. How could the author surrender the possibility that his hero (a surrogate for himself) might perish. Instead, he allows a miracle to happen. An erstwhile former friend who is now a German soldier saves him at the last moment. That is what makes the difference between a child’s faith and an adult’s. One harbors less certainty that he will be saved. It is what we call “magical thinking” and that is what saves Ari. The illustrations of landscape are quite good, while those of people are more amateurish but convey what is intended. Congratulations to the young artist/author for his sincerity and perseverance, to his family who encouraged him and to the man who helped him find the details he needed regarding the Holocaust and the camps.
Children’s
Keeping My Hope
- Review
By
– February 13, 2014
Marcia W. Posner, Ph.D., of the Holocaust Memorial and Tolerance Center of Nassau County, is the library and program director. An author and playwright herself, she loves reviewing for JBW and reading all the other reviews and articles in this marvelous periodical.
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