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Mohrbooks Literary Agency
Sebastian Ritscher |
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FLOWERS IN THE GUTTER
This Young Adult Nonfiction title is the story of the Edelweiss Pirates, a group of working-class teens who not only survived but resisted the Nazis by whatever means they could, even when they knew it could cost them their lives.
Flowers in the Gutter is told from the points of view Gertrude, Fritz, and Jean, three young people from working-class neighborhoods in Cologne, beginning with their pre-school years at the dawn of the Third Reich in the 1930s. Gaddy shows how political activism was always a part of their lives and how they witnessed first-hand the toll it took on their parents--and how they still carried the torch for justice when it was their turn.
Once the war began, Gertrude, Fritz, and Jean and their friends survived and even resisted in one of the most heavily bombed cities in Germany. Gaddy includes tense accounts of fights with Hitler Youth and the Gestapo, of deseminating anti-Nazi pamphlets, of helping POWs and forced laborers, and even of sabotaging Nazi factories.
Ultimately, the war ended tragically for several young pirates, and Gaddy shows how post-war politics and prejudices led to these young men and women being branded criminals for decades after the war.
Flowers is a unique entry in a wave of books about historical and contemporary youth resistance; the Edelweiss Pirates were younger and more relatable for modern teens than other similar movements, and their passion for music and clothes make the resemblance to punk rockers of later decades hard to miss.
K. R. Gaddy is a freelance writer and historian. Her work has appeared in The Washington Post, Baltimore Sun, Bitch Magazine, Narratively, Proximity, Atlas Obscura, and OZY, among other publications. She is the recipient of a Robert W. Deutsch Foundation Ruby's Artist Award for her research.
Once the war began, Gertrude, Fritz, and Jean and their friends survived and even resisted in one of the most heavily bombed cities in Germany. Gaddy includes tense accounts of fights with Hitler Youth and the Gestapo, of deseminating anti-Nazi pamphlets, of helping POWs and forced laborers, and even of sabotaging Nazi factories.
Ultimately, the war ended tragically for several young pirates, and Gaddy shows how post-war politics and prejudices led to these young men and women being branded criminals for decades after the war.
Flowers is a unique entry in a wave of books about historical and contemporary youth resistance; the Edelweiss Pirates were younger and more relatable for modern teens than other similar movements, and their passion for music and clothes make the resemblance to punk rockers of later decades hard to miss.
K. R. Gaddy is a freelance writer and historian. Her work has appeared in The Washington Post, Baltimore Sun, Bitch Magazine, Narratively, Proximity, Atlas Obscura, and OZY, among other publications. She is the recipient of a Robert W. Deutsch Foundation Ruby's Artist Award for her research.
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Book
Published 2020-01-07 by Dutton Books for Young Readers |