The Wednesday Wars is the tale of Holling Hoodhood,
the only Presbyterian in seventh grade at Camillo Junior High. When the
school’s Jewish and Catholic students go to Hebrew School or Catechism,
Holling must stay at school and work with his teacher, Mrs. Baker.
Holling is certain that she dislikes him.
At first, Holling does odd jobs around school during
his Wednesday sessions. That is, until he goes out to clean the
blackboard erasers and the chalk dust blows in the window and lands on
the cream puffs to be given to the wives of the Vietnam soldiers. The
next Wednesday, Holling accidentally lets the two class rats escape into
the school. They show up later during a visit by the school board
members.
Mrs. Baker then decides to have Holling read
Shakespeare, a different play each week. Holling doesn’t realize it but
he is learning important lessons about his life while reading these
plays.
The story is told in Hollings voice, the voice of a
seventh grader during the 1967-1968 school year. He goes through all the
things a boy his age must endure. He is the target of the school bully.
He does not understand his parents, nor does he understand the things
that are happening in the world around him. He falls in love.
When Holling has been embarrassed at school, he tells
his sister that he is going to transfer to the Alabama Military
Institute. His sister reminds him that Saigon follows graduation from
there. The book gives readers a really good look at the sixties and the
changes that were taking place. There are some moving parts in the book,
like when Mrs. Baker’s husband is missing in action in Vietnam. Holling
notices that she is staring at a television news cast (Walter Cronkite)
about the war, hoping to get a glimpse of her husband.
The author, Gary Schmidt, also makes certain that there
are some funny parts as well. When the class rats chase Holling around
the school track during varsity cross country try-outs, the coach asks
him to join the team. Schmidt also makes certain that there is a
satisfying ending to the story.
This book would make a great addition to a social
studies lesson about the sixties. It makes unbiased references to the
Vietnam War, the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr. and the
decision of President Johnson not to run for re-election; all events
that remind us of the sixties.
There are some surprises in The Wednesday Wars,
too. Like, how did Mrs. Baker end up with a silver medal from the 1956
Olympics? Read The Wednesday Wars to find out. You will be glad
you did.
Mrs.Tammy DiBartolo is the Youth Services Manager for
Rapides Parish Library.