Incommunicado

Author:   Randall Platt
Publisher:   Skyhorse Publishing
ISBN:  

9781629146461


Pages:   336
Publication Date:   20 November 2014
Recommended Age:   From 10 to 14 years
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Temporarily unavailable   Availability explained
The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you.

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Incommunicado


Overview

Just about everyone is incommunicado in the small, sleepy Oregon coastal town of Sea Park during the winter of 1941. That is, until Pearl Harbor is attacked. Then Sea Park springs to patriotic life. But is Ruby Opal Pearl (aka Jewels) Stokes the only person to see what's really happening here? Tommy Kaye, the one person in her life who has provided security, shelter, and a smidgeon of respect-and who owns the biggest resort on the coast-is now the cause of the town's rage. Tommy's Japanese ancestry makes him the prime target of an angry mob, not to mention he's also rich, has a shady past (which includes Jewels's eccentric mother), and everyone in town owes him money. As the town's patriotism blossoms into paranoia and turns violent, Jewels has to do something to protect Tommy from internment (or worse), even if that something is going up against the town and the government, not to mention the FBI. Thus begins a twelve-year-old girl's war within a war.

Full Product Details

Author:   Randall Platt
Publisher:   Skyhorse Publishing
Imprint:   Sky Pony Press
Dimensions:   Width: 14.00cm , Height: 3.60cm , Length: 21.00cm
Weight:   0.451kg
ISBN:  

9781629146461


ISBN 10:   1629146463
Pages:   336
Publication Date:   20 November 2014
Recommended Age:   From 10 to 14 years
Audience:   Children/juvenile ,  Children / Juvenile ,  Children / Juvenile
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Temporarily unavailable   Availability explained
The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you.

Table of Contents

Reviews

""The town's rage against Mr. Kaye feels achingly real and darkens the mood, like the blackout cloths required on all windows. Despite her affection for him, even Jewels at times can't help but wonder if he's the enemy. She's a conflicted and complex character, imbued with unending, infectious spunk. . . . Readers will respond to one girl's determination to do what's right during a dark time."" —Kirkus Reviews ""In Randall Platt's able hands, young Jewels comes to life as a courageous and compassionate girl, willing to stand up for what she believes in and protect a local American of Japanese ancestry from an angry mob in their Oregon town - and from internment by the U.S. government during the aftermath of the bombing of Pearl Harbor. With vibrant dialogue and strong characters that leap off the page, Incommunicado offers a fresh, direct and unflinching look at rippling effects of a distant war on the people who live at home."" —Anjali Banerjee, author of Haunting Jasmine and Enchanting Lily “Part history and part mystery, Incommunicado has a feisty heroine worth cheering for.” —Peg Kehret, author of Animals Welcome and Dangerous Deception ""Through the clear eyes and no-nonsense voice of scrappy twelve-year-old Jewels Stokes, Randall Platt gives us a welcome take on World War II in a home front setting rarely explored, a coastal town in the Pacific Northwest where residents have the distinction of fearing the sight of invading soldiers on the beaches every time they lift the corner of their blackout curtains. Through Jewels—a character I fell in love with from the very first pages—Platt makes the tension palpable, and offers thoughtful insight on our country’s immediate turn against Japanese-Americans in the wake of the bombing of Pearl Harbor. With serious issues deftly interwoven, Incommunicadois, above all, a crackling yarn, with plot twists and action scenes so vivid, I felt I was already watching the thrilling movie version!"" —Linda Crew, author of Children of the River ""The town's rage against Mr. Kaye feels achingly real and darkens the mood, like the blackout cloths required on all windows. Despite her affection for him, even Jewels at times can't help but wonder if he's the enemy. She's a conflicted and complex character, imbued with unending, infectious spunk. . . . Readers will respond to one girl's determination to do what's right during a dark time."" —Kirkus Reviews ""In Randall Platt's able hands, young Jewels comes to life as a courageous and compassionate girl, willing to stand up for what she believes in and protect a local American of Japanese ancestry from an angry mob in their Oregon town - and from internment by the U.S. government during the aftermath of the bombing of Pearl Harbor. With vibrant dialogue and strong characters that leap off the page, Incommunicado offers a fresh, direct and unflinching look at rippling effects of a distant war on the people who live at home."" —Anjali Banerjee, author of Haunting Jasmine and Enchanting Lily “Part history and part mystery, Incommunicado has a feisty heroine worth cheering for.” —Peg Kehret, author of Animals Welcome and Dangerous Deception ""Through the clear eyes and no-nonsense voice of scrappy twelve-year-old Jewels Stokes, Randall Platt gives us a welcome take on World War II in a home front setting rarely explored, a coastal town in the Pacific Northwest where residents have the distinction of fearing the sight of invading soldiers on the beaches every time they lift the corner of their blackout curtains. Through Jewels—a character I fell in love with from the very first pages—Platt makes the tension palpable, and offers thoughtful insight on our country’s immediate turn against Japanese-Americans in the wake of the bombing of Pearl Harbor. With serious issues deftly interwoven, Incommunicadois, above all, a crackling yarn, with plot twists and action scenes so vivid, I felt I was already watching the thrilling movie version!"" —Linda Crew, author of Children of the River


Part history and part mystery, Incommunicado has a feisty heroine worth cheering for. -Peg Kehret, author of Animals Welcome and Dangerous Deception


Part history and part mystery, Incommunicado has a feisty heroine worth cheering for. --Peg Kehret, author of Animals Welcome and Dangerous Deception Through the clear eyes and no-nonsense voice of scrappy twelve-year-old Jewels Stokes, Randall Platt gives us a welcome take on World War II in a home front setting rarely explored, a coastal town in the Pacific Northwest where residents have the distinction of fearing the sight of invading soldiers on the beaches every time they lift the corner of their blackout curtains. Through Jewels-a character I fell in love with from the very first pages-Platt makes the tension palpable, and offers thoughtful insight on our country's immediate turn against Japanese-Americans in the wake of the bombing of Pearl Harbor. With serious issues deftly interwoven, Incommunicadois, above all, a crackling yarn, with plot twists and action scenes so vivid, I felt I was already watching the thrilling movie version! -Linda Crew, author of Children of the River


"""The town's rage against Mr. Kaye feels achingly real and darkens the mood, like the blackout cloths required on all windows. Despite her affection for him, even Jewels at times can't help but wonder if he's the enemy. She's a conflicted and complex character, imbued with unending, infectious spunk. . . . Readers will respond to one girl's determination to do what's right during a dark time."" —Kirkus Reviews ""In Randall Platt's able hands, young Jewels comes to life as a courageous and compassionate girl, willing to stand up for what she believes in and protect a local American of Japanese ancestry from an angry mob in their Oregon town - and from internment by the U.S. government during the aftermath of the bombing of Pearl Harbor. With vibrant dialogue and strong characters that leap off the page, Incommunicado offers a fresh, direct and unflinching look at rippling effects of a distant war on the people who live at home."" —Anjali Banerjee, author of Haunting Jasmine and Enchanting Lily “Part history and part mystery, Incommunicado has a feisty heroine worth cheering for.” —Peg Kehret, author of Animals Welcome and Dangerous Deception ""Through the clear eyes and no-nonsense voice of scrappy twelve-year-old Jewels Stokes, Randall Platt gives us a welcome take on World War II in a home front setting rarely explored, a coastal town in the Pacific Northwest where residents have the distinction of fearing the sight of invading soldiers on the beaches every time they lift the corner of their blackout curtains. Through Jewels—a character I fell in love with from the very first pages—Platt makes the tension palpable, and offers thoughtful insight on our country’s immediate turn against Japanese-Americans in the wake of the bombing of Pearl Harbor. With serious issues deftly interwoven, Incommunicadois, above all, a crackling yarn, with plot twists and action scenes so vivid, I felt I was already watching the thrilling movie version!"" —Linda Crew, author of Children of the River ""The town's rage against Mr. Kaye feels achingly real and darkens the mood, like the blackout cloths required on all windows. Despite her affection for him, even Jewels at times can't help but wonder if he's the enemy. She's a conflicted and complex character, imbued with unending, infectious spunk. . . . Readers will respond to one girl's determination to do what's right during a dark time."" —Kirkus Reviews ""In Randall Platt's able hands, young Jewels comes to life as a courageous and compassionate girl, willing to stand up for what she believes in and protect a local American of Japanese ancestry from an angry mob in their Oregon town - and from internment by the U.S. government during the aftermath of the bombing of Pearl Harbor. With vibrant dialogue and strong characters that leap off the page, Incommunicado offers a fresh, direct and unflinching look at rippling effects of a distant war on the people who live at home."" —Anjali Banerjee, author of Haunting Jasmine and Enchanting Lily “Part history and part mystery, Incommunicado has a feisty heroine worth cheering for.” —Peg Kehret, author of Animals Welcome and Dangerous Deception ""Through the clear eyes and no-nonsense voice of scrappy twelve-year-old Jewels Stokes, Randall Platt gives us a welcome take on World War II in a home front setting rarely explored, a coastal town in the Pacific Northwest where residents have the distinction of fearing the sight of invading soldiers on the beaches every time they lift the corner of their blackout curtains. Through Jewels—a character I fell in love with from the very first pages—Platt makes the tension palpable, and offers thoughtful insight on our country’s immediate turn against Japanese-Americans in the wake of the bombing of Pearl Harbor. With serious issues deftly interwoven, Incommunicadois, above all, a crackling yarn, with plot twists and action scenes so vivid, I felt I was already watching the thrilling movie version!"" —Linda Crew, author of Children of the River"


Author Information

Randall Platt writes fiction for adults, young adults, and those who don't own up to being either. Platt has been a full-time writer for more than twenty-five years. Her young-adult fiction has twice been awarded the WILLA Literary Award, has been awarded the Will Rogers Medallion, has won the Keystone State Reading Award, and has received honorable mentions for the Washington State Book Award and the PEN Center USA Literary Award.

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