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Read B For Buster (2007)

B for Buster (2007)

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3.5 of 5 Votes: 5
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ISBN
0440238102 (ISBN13: 9780440238102)
Language
English
Publisher
laurel leaf

B For Buster (2007) - Plot & Excerpts

12 July 2004 B FOR BUSTER by Iain Lawrence, Random House/Delacorte, June 2004, ISBN: 0-385-73086-1; ISBN Library: 0-385-90108-9"In an upstairs room in BlackpoolBy the side of a northern seaThe army had my fatherAnd my mother was having meMilitary madness was killing my countrySolitary sadness comes over me"--Graham Nash "Military Madness"As someone who couldn't kill another person for any reason, and who cannot condone governmental-sanctioned killing of any kind, World War II is an extremely complicated topic for me. The ongoing extermination of all those people by Hitler's forces would be something--if I had been alive at the time--I couldn't have just ignored. My response options wouldn't have been as simple as merely running away from the insanity, in the manner that I intended to avoid involvement in the Vietnam War, had it lasted a little longer."Is there anybody here who thinks, thatFollowin' the orders takes away the blameIs there anybody hereWho wouldn't mind a murder by another nameIs there anybody here whose pride is on the lineWith the honor of the brave, and the courage of the blindI wanna see him, I wanna wish him luckI wanna shake his hand, wanna call his namePut a medal on the man"--Phil Ochs, "Is There Anybody Here"Over the years I've gotten to know survivors and relatives of survivors of the Concentration camps, victims and relatives of victims of the Japanese Internment camps, as well as relatives and many family friends who fought for the US in The War.After the war my father, who was fifteen when they dropped The Bomb, joined the Army, trained to operate heavy machinery, boarded with German families, and helped clean up the massive devastation wrought in defeating Hitler.Schindler's List is one of my all-time favorite movies. The idea of successfully scamming the Nazis to save all those lives without resorting to violence--as Oskar Schindler is portrayed as having done--is certainly the kind of response to which I can relate.In my search for great books about WWII, LEFT FOR DEAD, THE DIVINE WIND, THE ART OF KEEPING COOL, and THE LIFE AND DEATH OF ADOLF HITLER top my list of recently published YA literature relating to that period of history.The latest YA tale set during World War II to intrigue me is Iain Lawrence's B FOR BUSTER, the story of a sixteen-year-old Canadian boy who has snuck away from his mother and abusive father, lied about his age and background, and finds himself in 1943 Yorkshire, England as a wireless operator in a squadron of the Canadian Air Force."I set the frequencies on my wireless. I fitted the screwdriver into the slot and turned it back and forth to match the numbers on my flimsy. It was a chore I had done so often, on so many [training] flights, that I found it hard to believe that I was doing it now on the way to Germany, astride a belly full of bombs. Then I grinned inside my mask to think that I was already on the battlefield, fighting in the boundless world of Superman and Buck Rogers, on a fabulous field that stretched in all directions and rose from the earth to the heavens. I imagined the people below turning their faces to the sky, telling each other, 'Look! Up in the sky! It's a bird, it's a plane. It's--the Kakabeka Kid!' "By the time this first op (mission) is complete, "Kak" and his fellow trainees have a rather different view of what they've gotten themselves into."The waiting is the hardest part"--Tom Petty"When I was still in school I read a story about a boy who had to choose between two doors. Behind one of them was a beautiful princess who would love him forever. Behind the other was a tiger who would kill him."I didn't remember anything else about the story, only those two doors and the boy's terror as he stepped forward to open one of them. But in the morning, at breakfast, I knew exactly how he felt."I stared at my plate and waited for the loudspeaker to come on, for that English WAAF to tell me if I would fly or not."The squadrons are sent out on bombing missions every night the weather is right. For Kak, nightmares follow missions follow nightmares as their patched-up Halifax, "B for Buster" repeatedly makes it to the various target cities and (barely) back while, one by one, other squadrons are blown out of the sky, leaving empty beds in the bunkhouse that are repeatedly refilled."And the battle's just begunThere's many lost, but tell me who has won?" --U2The author is supremely successful in portraying the sights, sounds, smells, and sweat of the plane and the incredible danger Kak's squadron is up against, as well as the destruction for which they are responsible.But Iain Lawrence's inspiration for writing this book involves the pigeons. Each of the Halifaxes carried homing pigeons who could be sent off to the base with a message, if a plane was fortunate enough to survive an "unexpected" landing, whether due to attack or to malfunction. And it is Kak's relationship with the slovenly, mysterious Burt the Pigeoneer that makes B FOR BUSTER an extraordinary tale. Taking refuge in the pigeon coop between ops, Kak comes to depend on the birds and their enigmatic keeper for his very sanity and survival."I stared at the pigeoneer. 'But what if lightning scared him so much that he couldn't fly home?'" 'Wouldn't 'appen, sir. Not to good birds like 'im and Percy. They want to get 'ome so badly that they keep on going, scared or not. That's courage, sir.'" 'No,' I said. 'Real courage is not being scared.'" 'Oh, no, sir. Pardon me.' He tipped his head, as though saluting.'Real courage is carrying on though you're scared to bits. It's doing what you 'ave to do. Birds are scared of lightning; men are scared of dying. Anything else wouldn't be proper, sir. But we all 'ave to carry on. Every little thing. Men and birds and fish and worms, we all just carry on.' "Readers won't learn anything about the causes or large-scale troop movements of World War II, for it is Kak's very personal perspective that we are tracking here, from utterly naive boy--who witnesses horrific sights of death, destruction, and ghosts--to a young man whose every future day will be colored by the War.B FOR BUSTER, is filled with action, and shows what It's really all about. (The reality Army recruiters like those in the Michael Moore movie couldn't begin to duplicate.)Richie Partington, MLISRichie's Picks http://[email protected] http://groups.yahoo.com/group/middle_... http://slisweb.sjsu.edu/people/facult...

I personally loved this book. All parts of the book were good, except for the very end. It's almost like Lawrence just didn't want to right anything else about it. The plot just stopped. One BIG question that I had after finishing the book today is what happened to Percy? He felt like a very influential character and the only person that Kak looked for at the end was Bert. The last mention that Lawrence made of Percy was when Kak jumped from the plane after Percy had woken him up from his dream and he was free falling through the air. I loved this book, but the ending didn't work for me.

What do You think about B For Buster (2007)?

There's a lot of literature about the American bombing squads of WWII, but not so much about the RAF, especially in the young adult section. This book has been on my shelf for years, but I haven't picked it up until now and frankly I don't know what stopped me. While still bearing a fictional narrative plot it still captures some of the horrible realities of these young men endured. It is very well researched and incredibully personal. I fear that this book may be out of print, but there may still be some prints still availible in the market. I'm certainly holding on to my copy!
—Frances Ann

I thought this was a great book. I liked how the main character was portrayed, the description said he was a sixteen year old and the writer made him a sixteen year old. Kak is a naive sixteen year old who joins the army to get away from his alcoholic father. He joins the bombing force excited and ready but after his first opp nothings the same.I liked how it was written. The bombing scenes and the descriptions of the burning cities were intense. Some swearing but nothing too bad and not too graphic of scenes.
—Emily Ann

I think this is more of a guy's book because I didn't really care all that much for it. It was mostly about war and pigeons and people's views on the value of life. I felt like it had a pretty good message, but it was kind of drowned out by all the "war" talk and suspense. You really wanted to know what happened next, but as soon as you were don with the book you didn't think it was all that remarkable.*This was written after I read the book - Teen's Top Ten review in 2005.It was okay. I just didn't get into the story and then there were some parts that I just went, "huh?" This isn't a book that I would recommend, but at the same time, I wouldn't not-recommend it.
—Snorkle

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