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4 Reviews
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5.0 out of 5 stars Handles subject sensitively
I bought this book for my son as he is reaching the age when kids start playing these kinds of games (we are Quaker and pacifist). It handles the subject very directly, but sensitively. He asked me to purchase a copy for his school library.
Published 2 months ago by Kathleen M Shissler

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3.0 out of 5 stars War is NOT a game
This quiet book leads 2nd / 3rd graders to believe that war is not good...whether it is a game and definitely if it is for real. The children are used to picking sides for US vs THEM and play war w/o thinking until one day a newcomer decides to leave without playing. The children stop to question his actions. He relates the story of his homeland and the death of family...
Published on October 20, 2007 by avid reader


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5.0 out of 5 stars Handles subject sensitively, November 16, 2011
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This review is from: Playing War (Hardcover)
I bought this book for my son as he is reaching the age when kids start playing these kinds of games (we are Quaker and pacifist). It handles the subject very directly, but sensitively. He asked me to purchase a copy for his school library.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Helps Children Talk about Peace and War, December 5, 2009
This review is from: Playing War (Hardcover)
A group of five children (four boys and a girl) decide, one summer day, to play "war" with pine cones for bombs, and sticks for guns. One boy, who has recently come to the United States from another (unnamed) country, starts to play but decides to go home when his friend Luke declares, "I'm going to blow their heads off."

The next day, Luke suggests playing war again, and wishes he could be in a real war. Sameer reveals that, in his home country, he lived in the middle of a war, during which a bomb destroyed his house and killed his parents and brother. The friends are shocked at Sameer's story of the tragedy of war. Luke decides that they ought to play basketball instead.

This picture book reveals the horrors of war in a gentle, sympathetic way. It would be a good book to get elementary-school kids talking about issues of war and peace.

I have included this book in my online Gender Equality Bookstore.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Courtesy of Mother Daughter Book Club.com, January 28, 2009
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This review is from: Playing War (Hardcover)
When I was young, I often played war in the back yard with my cousins. We made forts out of cardboard and collected hard, pea-sized berries from the Chinaball tree in our yard. Each side pelted the other until our supply of berries ran out. Then we called a truce, collected the ammunition that had fallen between forts, and started again.

I was reminded of my old pastime when I read Playing War, written by Kathy Beckwith and illustrated by Lea Lyon. It's summer and the children in the book are bored with playing basketball, lobbing water balloons and riding bikes. They decide to play war and divide into soldiers and enemies, then collect pinecones and sticks to use for ammunition.

But their game changes when one of the friends, Sameer, talks about the real war that kids find in his homeland, and how it affects their lives. Playing War is a picture book intended for elementary school readers. It exposes young readers to current events in an age-appropriate way, and it provides an entrée to talk about some of the issues going on in many parts of the world where children are enlisted as soldiers, or their families are affected by fighting. Playing War is a good read-aloud book appropriate for younger girls in mother-daughter book clubs.
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3.0 out of 5 stars War is NOT a game, October 20, 2007
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This review is from: Playing War (Hardcover)
This quiet book leads 2nd / 3rd graders to believe that war is not good...whether it is a game and definitely if it is for real. The children are used to picking sides for US vs THEM and play war w/o thinking until one day a newcomer decides to leave without playing. The children stop to question his actions. He relates the story of his homeland and the death of family. War is not good. The kids quickly opt for a game of basketball. Good book for reading aloud and discussing the images of war as a game.

Reminds me of Bang Bang You're Dead by Louise Fitzhugh
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Playing War
Playing War by Kathy Beckwith (Hardcover - July 2005)
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