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Cover of Peter "PT"

Peter "PT"

By Mary Haeseler Culbertson

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Publish Date

1944

Publisher

David McKay

Language

eng

Pages

26

Description:

This is an unusual book, which reveals in several ways how our perception of things has changed since 1944. The book is a children's "read to me" book which is a fantastic fiction based on an anthropomorphized civilian "run-about" power boat named Peter that wants to join the (WWII) war effort. It gets its chance and is converted into a PT boat, supposedly the prototype of the PT boat fleet. The reader is dragged through some rather tedious naval history/jargon, and a fair amount of flag-waving, before getting to the "meat" of the story: "... for PT had hardly gotten water under his own keel again when he found himself right in the thick of things. "PT could move so fast that the Jap guns couldn't aim at him or hit him and the Japs themselves just turned yellower and yellower with fear. For PT was taking a telling toll of the Japs. Come night, PT would turn off his lights, muffle his motors, and sneak right up on a great big Jap ship. Then PT would launch his torpedoes. And almost before the Japs knew what hit their ship, zingo--- down to the bottom of the sea it would go." As a 5-year-old boy in 1954 I found this rather exciting (almost worth sitting through the rest). But even then I recall the person reading it to me (who I think was a librarian at our church library) had a disconcerted tone in her voice, and deflected my requests to read it again on subsequent visits. As to literary merit, the writing is a bit dreary and uninspired (though praised in the dust jacket blurb for its accuracy/authority), and the illustrations are mediocre -- Dr Seuss this is not. But as a "children's book" it does reveal a lot about the American mindset in 1944. Illustrations by Annette Byrne

subjectsFiction,  Juvenile fiction,  Ships,  Torpedo-boats

PlacesBayonne,  NJ

TimesWWII