| Honor flight : celebrating America's veterans Author: Gottesfeld, Jeff | ||
| Price: $23.28 | ||
Summary:
Located in our nation's capital are monuments dedicated to the service members who fought in the last centurys wars. It is here that the Honor Flight program has brought some 300,000 aging veterans, all of them deserving a chance to see their commitment and sacrifice honored and commemorated. Companion book to Twenty-One Steps.
| Illustrator: | Tavares, Matt |
Reviews:
Kirkus Reviews (+) (01/01/26)
School Library Journal (+) (11/01/25)
Booklist (+) (12/01/25)
The Hornbook (00/03/26)
Full Text Reviews:
School Library Journal - 11/01/2025 Gr 2–4—With the same reverence that characterizes their Twenty-One Steps: Guarding the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, Gottesfeld and Tavares pay tribute to veterans and the volunteer organization that offers free "Honor Flights" to the oldest still living veteransa who served in World War II, Korea, or the Vietnam era. These flights allow them to visit the war memorials in Washington, D.C. Assuming the voice of a generic vet—"Call me Kilroy. Squid, G.I. Joe, Airman, Jarhead, WAC, or WAVE"—Gottesfeld describes how the Honor Flight Network provided transportation, a guardian, and a tour of sites in the National Mall and Arlington. Exchanging waves with a group of former "Rosie the Riveters," the narrator pauses at each memorial to remember and reflect (sometimes pointedly: "World War II, a circle of unity. I recalled a nation of shared purpose,") Tavares depicts guardians and their charges, most of the latter in and out of wheelchairs, taking the tour and afterward gathering beneath the Lincoln Memorial to talk and bond. Having tearfully read a packet of appreciative letters from friends and schoolchildren on the flight home, the narrator lands to the sort of warm, celebratory welcome that, he remarks, "many of us were denied all those years ago." Still—"This is why we had served," he concludes. "It was an honor." VERDICT A solemn and respectful reminder to younger readers of what was paid and what is owed—with strong emotions and a few well-placed dashes of vinegar to counter any incipient sentimentality.—John Peters - Copyright 2025 Publishers Weekly, Library Journal and/or School Library Journal used with permission.



