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Born to Fly [Hardcover]

Michael Ferrari (Author)
4.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)

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Book Description

July 14, 2009 8 and up3 and up
Born to Fly tells the story of eleven-year-old tomboy Bird McGill. Ever since she can remember, Bird has loved flying in small propeller airplanes with her mechanic dad. When the local airstrip is turned into a military flight school, Bird is in heaven. But when a young Japanese American student named Kenji Fujita joins Bird’s class, the entire school seems to be convinced that he’s a spy, or at the very least, that he and his uncle want the Japanese to win. Bird is wary of Kenji, not just because he’s Japanese, but because he steals her flight-related topic for a school report and leaves her to write about the deadly boring local marsh weed. But on Bird’s first trip to the marsh, she and Kenji accidentally discover real spy activity in the area. Bird realizes that Kenji is actually a stand-up guy—and she and Kenji begin an adventure that will shake the town and may even change the future of the United States.

Winner of the Dell Yearling Contest

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Editorial Reviews

From School Library Journal

Grade 4–7—Bird McGill regards her dad as her best friend. He takes her up in the planes he repairs and lets her take the controls, and he encourages her dream of becoming a pilot. But a special bulletin disrupts her 11th-birthday afternoon: Japan has attacked the military base in Pearl Harbor, and Bird's world is turned upside down. During the next few months, the local airstrip is turned into a military flight school, and her dad is shipped overseas. When a Japanese-American boy joins Bird's class that spring, he is met with distrust. Although his uncle, with whom he is staying, is a longtime resident of Bird's Rhode Island town, they are both thought to be spies, or at least loyal to Japan. Circumstances compel Kenji and Bird to join forces one day to escape Farley, a class bully, and in the process they stumble on evidence of an enemy submarine in the area. When they attempt to report what they have seen, nobody believes them. Their problems are compounded when Farley's shiftless father is murdered and the local engine factory is sabotaged: Kenji's uncle is blamed. Only Bird can clear Uncle Tomo, but the murderer has threatened to kill her family if she speaks up. Well-developed characters make this story of friendship amid hostilities shine. While the coincidences surrounding the murderer can stretch credulity at times, this action-packed first novel is full of engaging twists and turns, and readers learn about the injustices done to many Japanese Americans during World War II. First-rate historical fiction.—Kim Dare, Fairfax County Public Schools, VA
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

About the Author

Michael Ferrari lives in Avon Lake, Ohio, where he is a teacher. Born to Fly is his first novel.

Product Details

  • Reading level: Ages 8 and up
  • Hardcover: 224 pages
  • Publisher: Delacorte Books for Young Readers (July 14, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0385737157
  • ISBN-13: 978-0385737159
  • Product Dimensions: 5.9 x 0.8 x 8.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 12 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #759,084 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Michael Ferrari lives in Ohio, where he is a writer and a teacher.

BORN TO FLY won the Delacorte Yearling Prize for a first middle grade novel. Mr. Ferrari got the idea for BORN TO FLY at a WWII airshow, when he overheard a boy telling his little sister that girls could never be fighter pilots. He wrote the story for her, and his daughters.

 

Customer Reviews

9 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.9 out of 5 stars (9 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars one of my favorite books, July 21, 2009
A Kid's Review
This review is from: Born to Fly (Hardcover)
I may be only 9 years old, but I've read a lot of good books. And this marvelous book `Born To Fly` is one of my top 5,maybe even top 3, favorites. I am glad that someone finally made an action-adventure novel with a real female heroine. I also like the friendship bond that happens between Kenji and Bird. Lastly, I absolutely love the increasing drama. All in all, I think the book deserves the Delacorte Yearling Prize. Thank you.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Born to Fly, March 28, 2011
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David Rodgers (valparaiso, indiana USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Born to Fly (Paperback)
I bought this book a few weeks ago for my 9 year old granddaughter. She was home sick one day last week and told me on the phone she had started it that day and finished it in the evening. She thought it was a great book and it obviously captivated her for the afternoon.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Fantastic Middle Grade Read, October 21, 2010
This review is from: Born to Fly (Hardcover)
Born to Fly is a an extemely enjoyable adventure novel that stars a girl, but which will be loved by both boys and girls. Ferrari's writing is wonderful throughout and I have a number of great excerpts to share with you. To start with, here is the novel's first sentence:

Just because I was a girl in 1941, don't think I was some sissy. Shoot, I saw stuff that would've made that bully Farley Peck pee right through his pants.

I love that opening because it does three things right away: it introduces our character and gives the reader a feel for her, it promises conflict, and it just comes right out with the date. I'm often frustrated with historical novels that wait ten or twenty or even fifty pages to tell me when the story is taking place. Granted, sometimes it's more important to open with an exciting event or a character exchange and not every novel can or should begin with a character reading a newspaper or listening to the date on the radio.

But whenever possible, if the time period is important to a story, it's better if writers follow Ferrari's lead and just come right out with the date. Otherwise, I, and I don't think I'm the only one, will be distracted through the first part of the story checking the back cover or skimming ahead to find a date and a frame of reference--that's valuable time that I'm not hooked by the writer and being drawn into the narrative.

I could tell you about the main character in Born to Fly, but Ferrari does a much better job of writing a resonating character description to catch the reader's imagination:

Seeing me in my World War One pilot's skullcap and goggles and my Huck Finn dungarees, you would've never guessed that someone with a neat name like Bird McGill was actually just an eleven-year-old girl.

Can't you just see her standing there? And look, Ferrari did the same thing with the character's age he did with the date. It just saves time.


We learn all about Bird's love of flying and her heart's fondest desire to be a fighter pilot despite the fact that she's a girl--remember, this is 1941. So Ferrari's protagonist has a goal firmly in place to drive the narrative, but Ferrari is too smart to just leave it at that. Two important things happen at the start of the novel. The first is the bombing of Pearl Harbor, resulting in Bird's father being called to war.


As important, if not more so in terms of the novel's plot (not American History), Bird's best friend moves away and she is lonely. This creates a second subconscious desire in Bird and an unstated goal for the protagonist: not only does she want to fly, she needs a friend, and the reader recognizes this even if Bird does not. Ferrari doesn't just tell us Bird is lonely, he shows us:

Sitting on the roof of our barn, I had a bird's-eye view of our backyard picnic table and the remnants of my unattended birthday party--un-used hats, clean paper plates, unopened party favors. Mom had made me hand out invitations to all the girls in my class. Not a single one came. They weren't my friends or anything, but still, when you're ten years old, you have to really despise someone to turn down free cake and ice cream.

Fortunately for lonely Bird, there's a new boy at school. A new Japanese boy. Just after Pearl Harbor. He's staying with his Uncle because his parents are "away." There's also an airport in this sleepy Rhode Island town where they train pilots with PS-40s. Could it be Bird will manage to fly one? Will she and Kenji, the new Japanese boys become friends during such a turbulent time? Are there spies hiding in town developing nefarious plots against America from within (and actually, wouldn't it be weird that I brought it up if there weren't)?

I can say no more, Esteemed Reader, lest I risk ruin your reading of Mr. Ferrari's novel. And you should read it because it's really, really good. That concludes my review. Let's talk craft.

As I promised to shorten these posts, I'm going to show two examples from the book of historical details used to great effect, and then I'm going to plug upcoming interviews again, and then I'll leave you with some choice passages. Sound like a plan? Ready... break!

Example One:

When I got there she was just sitting on the front porch swing in the same black dress she'd been wearing for two months. Her eyes didn't even move. They just stared down at this portrait she clutched of her son, Carlie in his white Navy Uniform... ...I stared up at the gold star in her window. It wasn't as pretty as you'd think. Normally, you'd figure that gold is better than blue--but it wasn't to anyone who knew what a gold star meant. I bet the Widow Gorman would have given everything in the world to trade that gold star for a blue one, if she could.

I've talked about this before in my review of Emma's River, but I firmly believe the best historical writers find historical details linked to death and/or gruesome events. Why? Because readers are sick and they like it. Especially young readers.

A good historical writer doesn't try to fully recreate the past in the mind of their reader--those who do often bore their readers. All the historical details in the world aren't going to change the fact that Born to Fly is being read by mostly younger readers in 2010 who were not alive in 1941 and have no direct frame of reference. For many, Pearl Harbor is a movie about shirtless Ben Affleck, and the day is soon coming when there will be children who don't even know who Ben Affleck was (please God, not this day).

The thing to do then is to cherry pick the most interesting and most necessary details to create more the suggestion of the past than the past itself. Helpful tip: human beings die, they don't like it, and their ears prickle at the faintest whisper of the possibility of death occurring sooner than predicted (never). Details regarding anything to do with death garner immediate reader curiosity. But be careful! Details too gruesome, particularly in a book targeted at a younger audience, will turn off readers. Gross them out too much and they'll put the book down

The morbid detail of the gold star and its impact to a family is spot on perfect. It's interesting and it illuminates the atmosphere of worry and sorrow back home during the war, creating instant empathy in the reader--it's not all bloodlust:) What if that star were on my window, the reader thinks. If this were the only detail of WWII presented (it isn't), it would be nearly enough. The reader might still be imagining a somewhat inaccurate world of shirtless Ben Affleck (inaccurate, but so right), but he/she gets the main concept: during WWII, someone you love might not come home

Later, Ferrari uses this idea he's intentionally cultivated in the reader's mind to great effect. While out in a field, Bird is bombed by a bag of flour by a pilot in training, which is another interesting detail. Who knew test pilot's practiced with flour? But the purpose of this scene is to set up a meeting between Bird and the pilot as their meeting is important to the later plot.

Ferrari could have brought the two together after this in any number of settings, but he has wisely chosen the one guaranteed to generate maximum suspense, which also reinforces the reader's sense of war-time tension:


Suddenly the doorbell rang and I jumped right out of my bed. You see, out where we lived our doorbell almost never rang, especially at night. After a moment I could hear Mom's slow, measured footsteps cross to the door. I ran to the top of the stairs and stuck my head through the banister to see. As Mom opened the door, I noticed that her hand was shaking. On our doorstep were two Army Air Corps officers standing at attention, one behind the other. The older one in front took off his hat.
"Mrs. McGill?" he asked.
Mom took a deep breath. Like she was bracing herself for something bad, which made my hand clutch the banister.
"I'm Captain Winston; this is Lieutenant Peppel." The captain stepped aside.
Lieutenant Peppel stepped forward, head bowed. "Ma'am, I'm awful sorry."
Mom covered her mouth. "Oh God!"
"The lieutenant thought it was part of the exercise, Mr. McGill," the captain explained.
"I had no idea your little sprout was gonna be out on the airfield this mornin'," said the young lieutenant.


It's great stuff isn't it? I could go on and tell you how much I admire Ferrari's courage in presenting 1941 children as the bigots they were saying the racist things the likely would have said. Sanitized history is a lie and showing or at least hinting at the darker parts of the time establishes authorial credibility. I could go on about that, but I won't. I promised short, so we'll call it a review.

Born to Fly is well worth your time and dollars. It also won the Delacorte Yearling Prize for a First Middle-Grade Novel and if you've got a novel and you sure would like to win that, you should definitely read this book so you know how much you're going to have to up your game.

As usual, I'll leave you with some of my favorite passages from Born to Fly:

Alvin was only four but he had a voice like Louis Armstrong. It was so deep and hoarse, like he woke up gargling like a bullfrog. You'd never believe it could come out of such a small person.


Embarrassing? She spent an hour every morning stuffing socks in her bra and I was embarrassing.



The snow sprinkled over the families saying goodbye on the platform like giant grains of rice at one of Father Krauss's weddings. The conductor whistled and the soldiers and sailors reluctantly grabbed their duffle bags,... Read more ›
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