The Fighting Ground

The Fighting Ground is a 1984 historical young-adult novel written by Edward Irving Wortis, under his pen name, Avi. The book is about the disillusioning experience of a young teenager who runs away to fight in the American Revolutionary War. The novel covers two days, 3 to 4 April 1778.[1]

The Fighting Ground
AuthorAvi
CountryUnited States
GenreChildren's historical fiction
Publication date
1984
Media typePrint
ISBN0-06-440185-5

The Fighting Ground won the 1985 Scott O'Dell Award for Historical Fiction and was listed on the ALA's Notable Children's Books list.[2] It was banned from elementary schools in Florida's Bay District Schools in 2008 for containing profanity.[3]

Plot summary

A thirteen-year-old New Jersey boy named Jonathan is impatient to join the Revolutionary War. His father used to help him train, but now after returning from a battle with a wound in his leg, the father is fearful and does not want Jonathan to leave. However, when the war bell rings on 3 April 1778, Jonathan leaves anyway. He borrows a tavern owner's gun and joins a morning-long march to battle the German Hessians, who are allied with the British. Jonathan ends up being taken prisoner. Three Hessians take him to an old house where they bury a murdered couple, and Jonathan finds a small boy, a son of the buried couple, in the barn. He develops some degree of Stockholm Syndrome, before escaping in the night back to the American army camp. The Corporal, who turns out to be the one who murdered the boy's parents, knows where the house is. As he leads the American military to the house, they force Jonathan to see if the Hessians are awake or asleep. Out of compassion, he slips away and tries to help the Hessians escape, but he fails, and the Hessians lose their lives.

References

  1. Williams, Nancy S. (2004). Using Literature to Support Skills and Critical Discussion for Struggling Readers: Grades 3-9. Lanham, Md.: Scarecrow Education. p. 30. ISBN 978-1-57886-096-8. The Fighting Ground avi.
  2. "The Fighting Ground by Avi". HarperCollins. Retrieved September 15, 2012.
  3. Whelan, Debra Lau (June 16, 2008). "Florida School District Bans Avi Book". School Library Journal. Archived from the original on February 8, 2013.

Hessians


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