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SERGEANT BILLY by Mireille Messier

SERGEANT BILLY

The True Story of the Goat Who Went to War

by Mireille Messier ; illustrated by Kass Reich

Pub Date: Sept. 17th, 2019
ISBN: 978-0-7352-6442-7
Publisher: Tundra Books

This is the remarkable true story of an ordinary goat who became the beloved mascot of the Fifth Canadian Battalion during World War I.

In Messier’s dryly humorous tale, Billy adapts well to army life, traveling with the soldiers on training exercises, boarding the troop ship to England with them, and being smuggled onboard the ship to France in an empty orange box. He never complains about the squalid conditions of life in the trenches (he is depicted bleating at a rat) and provides important moral support to frightened or tired soldiers, who mention him affectionately in their letters home. He even saves lives, butting three soldiers into a trench before a shell explodes. Billy becomes such a great protector and defender of his regiment that he is promoted to sergeant and eventually becomes a decorated war hero, surviving the war and ultimately returning to his original owner, depicted as a little girl on a farm in Saskatchewan. Messier’s smooth, well-paced text and Reich’s muted gouache illustrations in warlike tones of olive and brown well convey the poignancy and humor of the story. Such afflictions as trench foot and shell shock are conveyed though not explored in depth, and no characters die. All human characters appear to be white.

Imaginatively conveys the drudgery—if not the sheer terror—of war to a young audience.

(author’s note, photographs) (Picture book. 4-8)