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31+ Works 6,945 Members 128 Reviews 9 Favorited

About the Author

Disambiguation Notice:

Wrote stories about the Echo Company in the midst of the Vietnam War under the pseudonym Zack Emerson.
Writes the Santa Paws series under the pseudonym Nicolas Edwards.

Series

Works by Ellen Emerson White

Kaiulani: The People's Princess, Hawaii, 1889 (1994) 1,022 copies, 7 reviews
The President's Daughter (1984) 329 copies, 11 reviews
Long Live the Queen (1989) 205 copies, 8 reviews
White House Autumn (1985) 196 copies, 7 reviews
Long May She Reign (2007) 178 copies, 14 reviews
The Road Home (1995) 125 copies, 5 reviews
Life Without Friends (1987) 87 copies, 2 reviews
A Season of Daring Greatly (2017) 63 copies, 4 reviews
Friends for Life (1983) 56 copies, 3 reviews
Welcome to Vietnam (1991) 44 copies, 4 reviews
Webster: Tale of an Outlaw (2015) 43 copies, 1 review

Associated Works

Thirteen: 13 Tales of Horror by 13 Masters of Horror (1991) — Contributor — 394 copies, 5 reviews

Tagged

1960s (21) 19th century (20) 20th century (31) America (19) American history (46) biography (53) chapter book (31) children (37) children's (77) children's literature (20) Dear America (218) diary (127) family (24) fiction (329) Hawaii (65) historical (46) historical fiction (429) history (87) journal (22) juvenile (20) juvenile fiction (25) middle grade (29) orphans (23) own (34) politics (32) princess (25) read (63) Royal Diaries (56) royalty (27) series (63) shipwrecks (22) teen (44) Titanic (135) to-read (138) Vietnam (41) Vietnam War (83) war (42) YA (164) young adult (187) young adult fiction (21)

Common Knowledge

Other names
Edwards, Nicholas (the Santa Paws books)
Emerson, Zack
Birthdate
1961-08-28
Gender
female
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Rhode Island, USA
Places of residence
New York, New York, USA
Narragansett, Rhode Island, USA
Education
Tufts University
Disambiguation notice
Wrote stories about the Echo Company in the midst of the Vietnam War under the pseudonym Zack Emerson.
Writes the Santa Paws series under the pseudonym Nicolas Edwards.

Members

Reviews

I'm reading the Dear America series for the first time at the age of 27, so I know I'm far from the age of the target audience, but I have to say this book was excellent. I love the diary format and am excited to continue on to other books.
 
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evansmommy | 36 other reviews | Sep 18, 2024 |
In her diary in 1912, thirteen-year-old Margaret Ann describes how she leaves her lonely life in a London orphanage to become a companion to a wealthy American woman, sails on the Titanic, and experiences its sinking.
 
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PlumfieldCH | 36 other reviews | May 1, 2024 |
I read this book about an 18-year-old drafted to fight in the Vietnam War when I was a teenager, which was many years ago. I recently remembered the series and recalled being surprised by how much I liked it, so I tracked it down to read again. It really was far outside of the type of books I read back then and is still quite different from my normal preference today. And just like when I was younger, I really liked this book.

The story opens with the MC, Michael Jennings, newly arrived in Vietnam after basic training in the States. He's shuttled through various bases until he ends up with the people with whom he'll be spending most of his time. That's where the story, and series, really begins, as he meets those who have already been near the DMZ for some time and have developed different ways to cope. Michael earns the nickname "Meat" (as in Fresh Meat), which sticks through the rest of the book. I kinda rolled my eyes, though, because it's a trope that annoys me a little that this one new guy out of all the new guys they have gotten happens to keep the new-guy nickname.

Early in the book, I wasn't sure I'd want to continue the series. The narration is often choppy, but it's purposely so. Now and then the author will write a sentence or paragraph as Michael's train of thought, including stopping mid-thought to switch to another one, sometimes several times. It feels very real and is how I think and even talk sometimes, but reading it can be a little frustrating. However, by halfway or so, Michael had really grown on me. Though the book is dark (what book about war, particularly this war, isn't?), it's also a poignant glimpse at a war that isn't written about as much, fought by teenagers who didn't really understand why they were there, and written for teenagers. For those who are wondering, though there is some language in it, it's not nearly as much as I'd imagine adult books about the same subject would have. I don't remember being bothered by that when I was a teenager, even though I was never one to use that kind of language myself. I'm not sure how much of the series I read as a teen, but I'm looking forward to continuing it now.
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Kristi_D | 3 other reviews | Sep 22, 2023 |
The fifth and final book in the Echo Company series takes us back to the base hospital where Lieutenant Rebecca Phillips is serving out her tour. Before long, most of the people she knew in-country have gone home one way or another, and then...it's her turn. The prospect of returning to normal life is more daunting than the idea of staying in Vietnam for another year, but Rebecca does what she has to do. Arriving in the United States, being back home with her family, none of that is really what it should be—she's just too messed up. And she's not sure that will ever change.

The overall idea that war destroys more than the actual soldiers is strongly presented in this book. Granted, Rebecca did more than just stay on her base and deal with the casualties that came in as other nurses would have done. The tragic encounter that left her injured in book #3 was certainly closer to the experiences of a soldier than those of a nurse. However, that only made her more broken. The book makes it clear that seeing everything she did in the hospital was enough to make "normal life" very difficult.

I struggled a little with having the constant perspective of someone who never tells the full truth (almost never). I'm not saying it feels unrealistic though. Apparently even before the war, Rebecca tended to tell half-truths, at least to her parents. Their relationship has been strained since before she left—that's a lot of why she left. However, from a fiction POV standpoint, for me, at least, it got a little frustrating to know she was holding back so very much, and I don't mean just the stuff that it makes a lot of sense for her to not want to tell them.

It was also a little frustrating to see her get good advice from wise and kind people and basically just ignore it. Again, it might be completely realistic for real-life people suffering from such high levels of PTSD to act this way, but it did start to make me wonder what the point of the book was. If it was just to show us the depressing side of life after war, it wasn't going to turn out to be my favorite at all. Things did end on a somewhat lighter note, though, and I do wish I could see some kind of follow-up for these characters. On the other hand, the realistic follow-up might not be something I'd want to see.

In the first part of the book, I found myself hanging on to everything written about Michael, the main character during most of the rest of the series. Apparently his change in personality in the last book didn't bother me enough to make me dislike him. I'm still surprised that I picked up the first book in this series when I was a teenager, because it's really not my norm. I didn't read them all back then, I think just 1 and 2, but I'm really glad I went through it all now. Here, at the end of the series, I think I would still recommend it for readers who might be interested. There is some language and in the last book a decent amount of sexual references (nothing remotely graphic).
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Kristi_D | 4 other reviews | Sep 22, 2023 |

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Statistics

Works
31
Also by
1
Members
6,945
Popularity
#3,521
Rating
3.9
Reviews
128
ISBNs
86
Languages
2
Favorited
9

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