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Freefall by Anna Levine — book cover

Freefall

by Anna Levine
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Overview


What would your life be like if military service was compulsory, not voluntary?




Aggie is eighteen and getting ready to do her service for the Israeli Army. She could get a cushy assignment—maybe pushing paper somewhere—or she could just take her chances. Only, Aggie isn't like that. Despite her small size and the fact that she needs to gain weight to even make the grade, and despite the total disbelief of her entire family (except her grandmother, who is an old freedom fighter and don't you forget it), Aggie is trying out for an elite combat unit.



Ben—Aggie's crush of the moment—isn't at all convinced that she's making the right choice. Shira, Aggie's best friend forever, is bewildered (and perhaps a bit too interested in Ben). Then there's Noah. And the serendipitous snow. And a good-bye kiss that turns into, well, a real kiss.



Luckily for Aggie, her backbreaking, sand-in-mouth, completely-lost-in-the-desert training produces an unlikely dividend: friends. The kind she never imagined she could have. The kind you'd go to war with—and for.


About the Author, Anna Levine

Anna Levine has lived in Israel for more than twenty years, having emigrated there on her own when she was eighteen. She is the mother of two sons—both of whom are serving in the Israeli Army. Aggie's experiences in the novel are partly based on the author's time spent in underground bomb shelters after rockets hit her kibbutz.

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Editorials

KLIATT - Claire Rosser

Anna Levine lives in Israel, and this story is about Aggie, an Israeli teenager about to enter the army. She and her friends are leaving high school, just like students all over the world; however, instead of going off to college or starting a career, they are drafted into military service. Most of the girls don't go into combat units, but Aggie, fighting her own lack of confidence, volunteers to go on a two-day test in the desert to see if she will be chosen for that very daunting challenge. She makes friends with a few other women who have totally different backgrounds, and bonds with them. Back home in Jerusalem, Aggie starts falling in love with the older brother of her best friend—Noah is already in the armed service and home on a weekend leave. Everything changes when northern Israel is bombed: there is a national alert and the military is called to service in southern Lebanon (the summer of 2006). It's strange to read about a war with folks communicating by cell phone, with a whole nation involved. Oddly enough, even though this is about Israel, there is very little about the enemy or about the politics of the struggle. It is a story about one girl and her coming of age, finding the courage to do what she wants to do. Reviewer: Claire Rosser

School Library Journal

Gr 8-10

Abigail Jacobs is preparing for high school graduation and compulsory service in the Israel Defense Forces. While her friend Shira is trying out for the entertainment troupe, Abigail has her sights set on the elite women's combat unit. Although she is discouraged by her family, she gains much-needed confidence and inner strength from Shira's older brother, Noah, a combat soldier himself. She survives a physically and mentally grueling boot camp and is inspired to help rescue stranded animals as bombs fall in northern Israel. When Noah is wounded and Aggie encounters him in the hospital, their relationship intensifies. Unlike Levine's Running on Eggs (Front St., 1999), this book is nearly devoid of politics, and the story could easily take place in any war-torn country where military service is a way of life for young people. A realistic narrative and a romance give the novel universal appeal. Recommend it to fans of Lisa Ann Sandell's The Weight of the Sky (Viking, 2006); readers can also turn to Valérie Zenatti's When I Was a Soldier (2005) and A Bottle in the Gaza Sea (2008, both Bloomsbury) for stories that focus more on the current conflict.-Rachel Kamin, North Suburban Synagogue Beth El, Highland Park, IL

Book Details

Published
March 17, 2009
Publisher
HarperCollins Publishers
Pages
256
ISBN
9780061881206

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