Saturday, July 25, 2015

DEFENDING BALTIMORE AGAINST ENEMY ATTACK by Charles Osgood



Charles Osgood, Defending Baltimore Against Enemy Attack: A Boyhood Year During World War II (New York: Hyperion, 2004).

Unabridged CD read by the author (Brilliance Audio, 2004).

Available for free on Audible at amazon.com.


 (Memoir)

Recommended by Wilda Morris


Charles Osgood stole a line from a famous novel to begin his memoir of one year during his childhood, the year 1942. “It was,” he says, “the best of times, it was the worst of times.” Though I’m not quite old enough to remember 1942 very well, the book evoked some of my childhood memories, among them ration books, playing “bombs over Tokyo” with cousins, and my Uncle Fred Webber going out to see that there were no lights on in the neighborhood when the air raid siren went off.

Charlie’s imagination led him to believe some of the things he did could help defeat the Germans—and sometimes got him into trouble. As he recounts the games and adventures in which he engaged, he is also telling us what it was like to attend a Catholic school in Baltimore in the 1940s and a lot about American culture of the time. He is somewhat nostalgic for outdoor children’s games; evenings with the family singing around the piano; and radio dramas, songs and movies that were popular during the war.

The book is a rich tapestry in which we find scrap drives, a young boy’s crush on a girl willing to listen as he tells her the plot lines of movies he has seen, what happened when he decides to “be” Zorro; the 1942 World Series, and victory gardens. Charlie didn’t like vegetables, so he was determined to grow peaches, pears, oranges and other fruits in the family’s small victory garden. He says, “At least I had stopped short of trying to produce Baltimore’s first banana tree” (p. 89). At Our Lady of Lourdes, however, he was assigned to argue against victory gardens in a debate.

You will have to read the book yourself to see what arguments Charlie came up with for that position, where he and his sister Mary Ann went when they ran away from home, how playing Zorro got him in trouble, and how he and his friend use a chemistry set to try to help win the war. It is all told with Osgood’s good sense of humor and timing. It is a short book, fun to read or to listen to. I highly recommend it.
 

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