Saturday, April 26, 2025

Radar and the Raft by Jeff Lantos - OPTIONAL

Radar and the Raft: A True Story About a Scientific Marvel, the Lives it Saved, and the World it Changed by Jeff Lantos, 186 NON-FICTION Charlesbridge/Imagine, 2024. $19 

Language: G (0 swears) Mature Content: G Violence: G 

BUYING ADVISORY: MS - OPTIONAL 

APPEALS TO: SOME 

Ethel Bell and her two kids, ages 11 and 13, were lucky to secure passage on steamer to get out of Africa and home to the states when the United States entered World War II. Unfortunately, a German U-boat torpedoes their boat, which sinks in under two minutes, taking the lifeboats with it. Of the 42 souls who made it to the remaining rafts, only 18 lived to tell the story, and 17 of those were on one raft.

Between each story of the raft survivors is a chapter explaining the history of radar and the scientists who developed it. The tech behind radar sounded so far fetched that Hitler turned it down twice. Many of the scientists who worked on the final leg of radar development went to Los Alamos to work on the hydrogen bomb. " The story of the raft was interesting, though the alternating chapters were a bit jarring at first. The book is fairly science heavy. Anyone who is interested in radar would find this fascinating, though it may not be a book teens would pick up on their own. There are nice photos and watercolor prints that add to the read. May work for a science class. The Bell family is white American, and the scientists are from various parts of the world. 

Michelle in the Middle 

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