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Brothers in Valor [Hardcover]

Michael O. Tunnell (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)


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Book Description

9 and up
Three German teenagers who are members of the Mormon Church join forces to create a youth resistance movement during World War II, putting their lives at risk.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

This fictionalized account of German resistance to Hitler holds more merit for its subject matter than for its delivery. The narrator, Rudi Ollenik, 11 when the novel opens in 1937, is a Mormon, like his best friends, Helmuth Hbener and Karl Schneider. Although church teachings contradict Nazi ideology, their branch leader, President Zander, runs their Hamburg community "as if God, church, and Hitler were all in league." The boys join Hitler youth groups so as not to make trouble for their parents, but they loathe the Nazis. After the war begins, Helmuth decides to fight back. He gets an illegal short-wave radio in order to listen to the BBC; writes up the British news, thus pointing up the lies of German media; and, with Rudi and Karl's help, distributes his handbills through mail slots and in telephone booths. In 1942 the three, along with a fourth accomplice, are caught, tortured and tried; Helmuth is executed while the other boys are sentenced to prison terms. As Tunnell (School Spirits) explains in an endnote, the handbills described here are translations of the actual reports circulated by the real-life Helmuth Hbener and his friends, a fact certain to impress readers. The author convincingly demonstrates the pervasiveness of Nazi propaganda. The research, however, feels stitched together and the characters are underdeveloped, with the result that suspense never builds; readers may stick with the story for its intrinsic interest, but its grip is unlikely to be visceral. Ages 10-up.

Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

From School Library Journal

Gr 6-10-This fictionalized account of the experiences of the Hbener Group, three Mormon teens who refused to accept Hitler's leadership, offers readers solid history but little literary flair. Told from the viewpoint of Rudi, the youngest member, the story moves quickly from 1937 through the execution of the ringleader, Helmuth, in 1942. In the course of events, he must contend with the fact that his mother loves a Gestapo officer, whom she marries. The group's nonviolent efforts to fight Nazism entail the dissemination of information garnered from illicitly heard BBC broadcasts. Karl, the eldest, would prefer resistance through more volatile means, but he bows to Helmuth's ultimately long-successful plan, discovering that spreading information can be more detrimental to the enemy than a single dramatic stand. Rudi matures, growing from a politically ignorant schoolboy into the young man who witnesses his friend's death. Tunnell does a superior job in showing how religious organizations within Germany responded to Nazism's attractions and demands, and in depicting the humane underbelly of such inhumanly murderous figures as the Gestapo-here in the form of Helmuth's stepfather, grieving at Helmuth's death sentence. While less compelling as storytelling than Bjarne Reuter's The Boys from St. Petri (Puffin, 1996), the facts upon which Tunnell builds his tale demand critical self-questioning by his readers.

Francisca Goldsmith, Berkeley Public Library, CA

Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.


Product Details

  • Reading level: Ages 9 and up
  • Hardcover: 214 pages
  • Publisher: Holiday House; 1st edition (April 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0823415414
  • ISBN-13: 978-0823415410
  • Product Dimensions: 8.5 x 5.7 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,224,005 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

I love books! This love affair began when I was small. My grandmother who raised me would read to me every day: fairy tales, comic books, and wonderful picture books like Caps for Sale and Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel. I soon discovered that books were the world's best teachers and entertainers. So, naturally, I grew up wanting to spend my life working with books.

When it came time to pick a profession, I decided to study law (which doesn't involve the kind of books I like). I was well into my university course work to prepare me for law school when something happened that changed my plans. At the time, I was working for an automobile dealer in Salt Lake City, Utah, and the service manager asked me to deliver a car to a customer at a nearby elementary school. The second I walked through the school doors, I was flooded with the strangest feelings. I remembered my favorite books and my magical childhood years. The next day I changed my major to education. Since then, I've completed several degrees, all of them relating to reading, children's literature, and teaching.

As with many avid readers, I harbored, since childhood, the wish to create my own stories. I wrote off and on when I was young, and then tried my first novel during my middle twenties (it was rejected by twenty or thirty publishers). Then for a number of years, instead of creating stories I channeled my writing efforts into professional educational books and journal articles. All the while, my desire to write books for young readers stayed strong. In the early 1990s, I found my way back to writing stories. My first effort was the manuscript for the picture book Chinook!, which was accepted on my third submission attempt by Tambourine Books (William Morrow).

Because I teach children's literature courses at a university, people sometimes ask if my teaching helps me to be a better writer. After all, I teach my students about children's books, what makes some books "better" than others, and I have, as a part of my professional endeavors, critiqued books for review journals. Therefore, I should know what makes for good writing and what doesn't. However, when I began writing my own books I discovered critiquing someone else's work is an entirely different process than creating your own stories. Perhaps I was simply too close to my own work, which made applying what I thought I knew about quality literature difficult. In any case, I had a lot to learn (and the learning has just begun!) about the creative process. I guess writers are born perhaps more than they are made. (I feel the same way about teachers.) So, part of the challenge has been to find and cultivate any spark of literary creativity with which I might have been blessed.

For more about Michael O. Tunnell, see the following sources:

Something About the Author, volume 103. Edited by Alan Hedblad. The Gale Group, 1999, pp. 168-173.

The Eighth Book of Junior Authors and Illustrators. Edited by Connie Rockman. H.W. Wilson, 2000, pp. 529-533.

Something About the Author, volume 157. The Gale Group, 2005, pp. 247-252

ALSO SEE MY WEBSITE: http://www.michaelotunnell.com

 

Customer Reviews

7 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.0 out of 5 stars (7 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Unknown story..., January 26, 2009
By 
This review is from: Brothers in Valor (Hardcover)
Compared to Anne Frank, Oscar Schindler or the White Rose, the story of young Helmuth Hübener is little known. There have been a few biographies written on him and the soon-to-be movie starring Haley Joel Osmont might shed some light on this heroic young man. Two well-known authors Susan Campbell Bartoletti and Michael Tunnel have written books on Hübener, only this time it is geared toward younger audiences.
In "Brothers in Valor," Helmuth's story is told through the eyes of his best friend and partner in crime, Rudi. Together Helmuth, Rudi and Karl, create an illegal mystery solving club, listen to the forbidden BBC, write and distribute anti-Nazi leaflets and eventually are arrested and sentenced by the infamous People's Court. In the end, Rudi and Karl are sentenced to prison, but it is Helmuth who takes the fall and pays the ultimate price for their actions.
While I considered "Brothers in Valor" a prolific bio-novel, I cannot recommend it without cautioning others. Young children and those easily traumatized should avoid it altogether. At some points it is down right graphic but entirely realistic; Rudi disagrees with his Hitler Youth leader and a group of boys torment him by shoe polishing his lower private parts. Once Rudi is arrested he is severely beaten and tortured.
At the age when most teens wander away from God and church, Helmuth, Rudi and Karl are particularly religious. They belong to the Mormon church; the author nor the characters never promote the denomination and yet they firmly believe that God would not want them to take part in a movement that does not please Him. When the rest of the world considered what was evil good and their own parents succumbed to Nazi propaganda, three young men chose to do what was right rather than what was popular.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Young Nazi Resistance Story Told for Young Readers, January 21, 2009
This review is from: Brothers in Valor (Hardcover)
Fictionalized account of Helmuth Huebener's small resistance group in Nazi Germany.

The book is written for middle school age readers and loses some of the intrinsic drama in the retelling.

This book could be of some interest to young teens looking for evidence of humanity in war.

Not surprisingly, it is not the best account of Huebener's personal sacrifice and courage in the face of Nazi oppression.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Great book!, April 11, 2003
A Kid's Review
This review is from: Brothers in Valor (Hardcover)
True story about three boys in Germany during WW2. They send out pamphlets to discredit Hitler's regime and are arrested by the secret police. The book tells about how they were treated in jail and what happened at their trial. It's a great book, but sad in the end.
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