Book Descriptions
for The Dog in the Wood by Monika Schröder
From The United States Board on Books for Young People (USBBY)
The end of World War II brought confusion, deprivation, despair, and oc cupation to Nazi Germany. In an insignificant East German farming village, the days that led up to Hitler’s demise were grueling for ten-year-old Fritz and his family. His grandfather—as head of the town’s Nazi Party Farmer’s Asso ciation—and Oma refused to flee as the Russians drew near. His mother, sis ter, and the hired hand, Lech, expected the Russians would bring liberation. No one expected what really transpired. Schröder’s brutal honesty about postwar plunder, imprisonment, death, and despair is a perspective seldom found in children’s books. lmp
From the Publisher
Heavy footsteps sounded on the tiles in the hallway. Then three soldiers entered the living room. They all wore torn green jackets with small red flags sewn onto their sleeves. They shouted in Russian. Fritz held Mama's hand and tried to stay as close to her as possible on the sofa. One of the soldiers broke the glass of the sideboard with the butt of his rifle, took out the bottle of brandy, drank from it, and passed it to the others. They rummaged through the china cabinet, throwing the plates on the floor. . . . Mama held his hand with a firm grip. Suddenly, one soldier pointed his rifle at them. "No!" Mama screamed. Fritz held his breath. "Stojat!" Lech stepped toward the middle of the room, holding his arms up. --FROM THE BOOK