Front Lines (novel)


Front Lines is a young adult historical novel by the American writer Michael Grant, who is most famous for his dystopian young adult fictional series The Gone Series. It is written from the viewpoint of three girls, Rio Richlin, Frangie Marr, and Rainy Schulterman. The series was originally titled Soldier Girls.

Plot

Front Lines starts out in 1942 and war is raging in Europe, China, Southeast Asia and Northern Africa. Millions have died.
In the USA, a court decision has made women subject to the draft and eligible for service. So in Gedwell Falls, California Rio Richlin is deciding whether to enlist, as is Rainy Schulterman in New York City and Frangie Marr in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
These three girls sign up to fight, they are girls with dreams and aspirations. Each has her own reasons for volunteering: Rio fights to honour her dead sister, Rachel; Frangie needs money to support her family, as her father has not been able to work since he was injured; and Jewish Rainy wants to kill Germans and bring down Hitler. For the first time they leave behind their homes and families—to go to war. But not everyone believes that women should be on the front lines and they encounter resistance as well as encouragement.
Front Lines tracks the girls through their different paths, Rio is literally on the front lines, Frangie is learning to be a medic and Rainy is training to be in an elite intelligence unit. While they all have wildly different backgrounds and are on seemingly separate paths, fate brings them together.

Characters

wrote "Though it's an epic story with a page count to match, the dynamic characters and urgent plot never get lost in the enormity of the historical moment." and the School Library Journal calls it "imaginative" and found "Though the length may put some teen readers off, the alternative history and wartime plot, which reads like a movie, will appeal to many." Kirkus Reviews wrote "Bestselling science-fiction author Grant did his research, but the odd and likely unintended consequence of his premise is the erasure of thousands of military women who historically served and fought and died. Still an engrossing portrayal of ordinary women in extraordinary circumstances." and Publishers Weekly describes Front Lines a "skillfully imagined alternate history."