Mushroom in the Sky

$17.99
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UPC:
9781460766057

Product Description

In the 80th anniversary year, Jackie French explores the dropping of the bombs at Hiroshima and Nagasaki in August 1945, which ended World War 2. 1942. Japan has bombed Sydney Harbour. Sixteen-year-old Ossie lies about his age to protect his country, even though it means abandoning his only family, a one-eyed dog named Lucky. Kind-hearted Mrs Plum is already looking after forty-six dogs belonging to soldiers who've gone to war. She can't possibly care for another. But just when she's becoming desperate to find a way to feed them, help arrives: thirteen-year-old Kat Murphy volunteers to take Lucky and persuades the girls at school to help, too. As Kat and Lucky grow closer, Kat realises he can still see Ossie, the master he loves. And somehow, Kat and Ossie catch glimpses into each other's lives, too. This extraordinary connection helps Ossie survive when he is taken as a prisoner of war to Japan. There, he witnesses a strange mushroom cloud rise above Nagasaki – the result of a bomb that will take, save and change lives, and forever leave the question: was it worth it? Taken from first-hand Japanese accounts of that momentous but often misunderstood time, this is a story of quiet heroism and endurance in the face of an unimaginable horror that continues to resound to this day.

Reviews

  • 5
    World War II, atomic bomb, kindness, caring, war, hope

    Posted by Novel Insight Reviews on 10th Feb 2026

    Sixteen-year-old Ossie is an orphan. He wants to go help in the war, but his dog Lucky has nowhere to go. Mrs Plum is already taking care of 46 other dogs from soldiers away at war. Thirteen-year-old Kat offers to help. Kat encourages children at her school to write to each soldier whose dog was left behind, from the perspective of the dog. Meanwhile, Ossie makes friends with two other soldiers, Lofty and Spud, but they’re captured together and taken to Japan. Time passes from when Ossie left in 1942, and in 1945. Historical information is included at the end of the book. A beautiful, moving story told in dual perspectives, demonstrating that even in so much death and sadness, there is also joy. It’s ideal for junior high readers.