A fictional look at the Civilian Conservation Corps.
One summer day in the early 1930s, Charlie discovers a set of mysterious buildings in the woods near his family’s northern Michigan home. Charlie’s father informs his son that these are barracks for Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s Civilian Conservation Corps, then quickly disparages the group as lazy, stating that they only “eat three meals a day, sleep, and sit around.” Charlie seems unaffected by his father’s opinion and befriends Luke, a teen with the CCC, when he becomes lost in the woods. Charlie’s father changes his opinion when the men battle a forest fire, saving the woods. Stories about the CCC and their work are vanishingly few for this audience, but this effort is so superficial that readers won’t take much away from it. Although some of the CCC’s work is illustrated, more is only referenced by the text in passing. Charlie, Luke, and Charlie’s father—all White, but some Black CCC men are depicted—are but thinly developed and do little to explain the role of the Corps at the time or the impact of their work. Charlie’s father’s suspicion of the program, however, does echo uneasily in our times. A closing author’s note briefly expands on the importance of the Corps and discloses Whelan’s personal connection to it. (This book was reviewed digitally with 11-by-18-inch double-page spreads viewed at actual size.)
Disappointing.
(Picture book. 7-10)