Sophia's War: A Tale of the Revolution by Avi


Sophia's War: A Tale of the Revolution
Title : Sophia's War: A Tale of the Revolution
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 1442414413
ISBN-10 : 9781442414433
Language : English
Format Type : Hardcover
Number of Pages : 320
Publication : First published September 25, 2012

Lives hang in the balance in this gripping Revolutionary War adventure from a beloved Newbery Medalist.

In 1776, young Sophia Calderwood witnesses the execution of Nathan Hale in New York City, which is newly occupied by the British army. Sophia is horrified by the event and resolves to do all she can to help the American cause. Recruited as a spy, she becomes a maid in the home of General Clinton, the supreme commander of the British forces in America. Through her work she becomes aware that someone in the American army might be switching sides, and she uncovers a plot that will grievously damage the Americans if it succeeds. But the identity of the would-be traitor is so shocking that no one believes her, and so Sophia decides to stop the treacherous plot herself, at great personal peril: She’s young, she’s a girl, and she’s running out of time. And if she fails, she’s facing an execution of her own.

Master storyteller Avi shows exactly how personal politics can be in this “nail-biting thriller” (Publishers Weekly) that is rich in historical detail and rife with action.


Sophia's War: A Tale of the Revolution Reviews


  • Jenn

    This was a great book!

    First I want to mention that I love what the author says in the note at the back: "Truth may be stranger than fiction, but fiction makes truth a friend, not a stranger."

    I have never had a good memory when it comes to history, but if I can read a story about an event or a character, it's more likely to stick with me.

    This is highly readable YA historical fiction. Even though it is written simply (on the younger side of YA) and with thorough explanations, it flows well and doesn't come across as dumbed down. Sophia is a wonderful character (love those strong female leads!) and I felt on the edge of my seat reading, even though I knew, based on history, what was going to happen.

  • JoLene

    This is the story of Sophia, a young colonial girl who witnesses Nathan Hale is he about to be hung for treason. This events marks the beginning of Sophia's transformation into a patriot. Sophia is spurred into action when her older brother, who fought in the battle of Brooklyn ends up on a prison ship and she tries to visit only to learn that he had died.

    Sophia is a plucky little heroine and her actions had a major impact on the war. I do not know a lot about the revolutionary war, but unfortunately, the format of the books make for a lot of knowledge dumping. This caused the book to have uneven pacing, especially in the beginning.

    Overall the story was interesting and I learned a bit about a period that I didn't know anything about, however, I wasn't a big fan of the writing style.

  • Lisa

    I enjoy Avi's work and his historical fiction is well-documented. When I read the synopsis of this book I was very interested. It so nicely supports my school's 5th grade Social Studies curriculum I knew this was a good topic.

    Personally I found the book interesting, but throughout my reading I kept asking myself "Which students in my school would read this book?" I can only think of a couple, and that makes me sad. Now, I'm trying to think of ways to sell my students on this very well-written book.

    Sophia is shocked when she witnesses Nathan Hale's hanging at the hands of British soldiers. Her family is living in New York City under British occupation. As tensions grow the family deals with Father's injuries and difficulties continuing to work and provide for his family, the British requirement that an officer is housed in their home, and the uncertainty of her brother's whereabouts and well-being.

    Sophia finds it difficult to know who to trust in these perilous times, but she knows she must do something to help her family. She grows up quickly as she takes on work to earn money to feed the family, scours the city for information about her brother, and deals with a youthful infatuation of the dashing young officer living in her home. He is the enemy, but so very charming!

    Circumstances continue to force Sophia into difficult circumstances, and when she learns that her brother is a prisoner who later dies on-board a prison ship Sophia promises herself that those responsible will feel her vengeance.

    This story describes the turbulent Revolutionary War times, the growth of a young girl into a brave patriot, and demonstrates the events that helped the colonists achieve victory over the British. Avi provides extensive notes at the end to explain where the facts leave off and the fiction begins. This was a great book for me, but I struggle to know which child readers this book will find.

  • Barbara

    Twelve-year-old Sophia Calderwood is a Patriot in 1776, and the family's New York City home becomes the dwelling place of John Andre, a British officer, the first of many to stay there during the British occupation of the city. Against her will, Sophia develops a crush on Andre and becomes increasingly drawn to him--until he refuses her request to help her brother who is a prisoner of war. She vows vengeance on the man after her brother dies. Eventually, Sophia gets her chance to get back at Andre three years later when she stumbles on a plot between him and Benedict Arnold that would spell the end for the American forces. Once Sophia has her revenge, she realizes it isn't as sweet as she had hoped. While Sophia's bravery and determination are undeniable and her journey on boat and by foot to thwart the plot sounds exhausting, what elevates this title is how the author constantly reminds readers through Sophia's own words just how torn she is. Although Andre represents the other side of the conflict during the Revolutionary War, Sophia still has feelings for him, and through her struggle, readers can see that it isn't as easy as it might seem to categorize someone as friend or enemy. The lines often are blurred. This is a satisfyingly told piece of historical fiction about what might have been.

  • Robert

    In 1776 the Thirteen Colonies had been at war with The British Empire for almost a year. During that time the Americans and the British had sustained gains and losses. Some were more significant than others. Clearly, the American troops were at odds with the most formidable army and navy in the world at that time. The British war machine was well trained, well equipped, and well run. The American troops were a rag-tag collection of militias spread out across the various colonies with varying degrees of discipline and leadership. To be sure, the troops did not gain real leadership until Washington, Livingston, Tallmadge, Putnam, and Lafayette came along. The Northeast colonies of New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, and New York were battle ground states before the term was coined. The war began in Boston, MA, but all of the northeast colonies were divided between those remaining loyal to King George and those wanting independence. Although some communities were easily identifiable others were not. New York, particularly the island of Manhattan was one such community. Manhattan and what were to become the five boroughs of New York City were distinct communities in 1776. Manhattan was a British strong hold. What is The Financial District today was all there was of New York City during the 18th Century.
    The British had captured Manhattan and it was the British army that occupied the city and the British Navy that patrolled mouths of the Hudson and East Rivers. The British held Manhattan and imposed a quasi martial law on the city. This is the environment that Sophia Calderwood at the age of 12 finds herself in. Sophia and her family were living in the city but at the tensions rose between the British and the Americans, her father thought it best to move the family out of the city to return when tension settled. Sophia and her mother were on their way out of the city when they witnessed the hanging of Nathan Hale. He had been captured, tried and convicted as a spy. The penalty was death by hanging. Sophia and her mother witnessed Hale’s execution. Witnessing this and hearing the comments made by the British soldiers who carried out the act began to galvanize Sophia’s resolve not to stand idly by doing nothing to help the cause for Independence. She had a brother who, when the story opens, is fighting with Washington. Sophia, her mother, and father are for independence, secretly. Witnessing the death of Nathan Hale further propels Sophia into knowing and fearing for her brother’s life. There had been no communication; the family had no idea as to his fate.
    Upon returning to New York City, the Calderwoods find the British had ransacked their home and they were subject to curfews, and strict rules about when and when not to be out in the streets. The Calderwoods were also informed that they would be billeting a British soldier. The need secrecy became even more important to them including keeping William Calderwood’s identity private. Sophia’s father returning from the country, is able to find copy editing work from printers in New York City, an up and coming British solder moves into the Calderwood’s’ home and things settle into a routine – until Sophia, a girl of 12 years of age, begins develops a crush on the soldier, John Andre, staying with them.
    Andre is handsome, charming, and talented and flatters the young Sophia. She is lulled into a false sense of security with her soldier/friend around. She begins to fantasize about maintaining a friendship that will not conflict with her desire for American independence. Andre sings to Sophia, walks her around New York, writes poetry to her and buys her presents. She develops real feeling for him that go un-conflicted until they are on one of their walks and Sophia sees that among a parade if captured American troops is her brother William.
    The conditions in which William is kept as a prisoner of war disgrace her, first held in Kings College, then a sugar house, then take to a British prison ship, The Good Intent she experiences first hand the deplorable conditions in which the British kept American prisoners. Conditions in British war prisons being what they were Sophia and her parents beg Captain Andre to help William. He refuses citing his honor as a British gentleman and officer as the reason. Many died in these conditions, Sophia’s brother among them ~ she is devastated. With William’s death comes Sophia’s pledge to avenge not only the death of her brother but also the unnecessary deaths of all the American troops.
    When Sophia determines to avenge William and defeat the British she embarks on a journey of intrigue, intelligence, and counter intelligence that takes in to the heart of the Revolutionary War. She comes face to face with the greatest scandal and betrayal of the Revolution and if this were not a work of historical fiction Sophia Calderwood’s name would be forever linked with the name that defines treason in American History.
    Avi is the author of over 70 children’s books. Many of these are works of historical fiction. Avi is the pen name for Edward Irving Wortis born in 1937. He is the Newbery Winner in 2003 for Crispin: The Cross of Lead and twice received the Newbery Honor for The True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle and Nothing But The Truth. Most recently Avi has received praise for his 2011 book City of Orphans another work of historical fiction that details the lives of immigrant children orphaned in New York City at the turn of the 20th Century. These newsboys are modern day Dickensian characters. In reading City of Orphans one sees not only the streets of New York City in 1893 but also the streets of London fifty years earlier. Fagan, Dodger, and Oliver Twist are the literary connections to Avi’s work. This work is also based on a short article written for the New York Times detailing the lives of these boys who would rather sell newspapers for pennies than go to the public work houses and orphanages of the time.
    Sophia’s War is an honest straightforward account of a young girl’s struggle to understand the world she lives in, how that world is changing and what exactly her place is in it. Avi writes from Sophia’s point of view. Sophia tells her story as if she is conversing with the reader in the form of a letter, the book begins “Dear Reader.” As she tells her story she often interjects her narrative with the phrase ‘Dear Reader’ this serves to pull the reader in, making him or her an integral part of the story. Sophia struggles with her loyalty to family and country while trying to sort out her feelings for a British soldier who is very flattering to her. She then struggles with the consequences of her actions. Sophia quickly learns there is a difference between the romantic notions of war and the realities of standing for one’s beliefs. Avi tells this story as a man not loosing or sacrificing the femininity of his main character. Other writers of historical fiction who write from the girl’s point of view include, Jennifer Donnelly, Anne McGovern, Elizabeth George Speare, Ruta Sepetys, and Laura Ingalls Wilder. Notably, these are women writing from the point of view of their main character who are young women. Avi achieves this with honesty and clarity. His being male does not diminish the strength of the story.
    There are three stories with in the one. Avi writes in such a way as to ‘fool’ the reader into thinking that all of the characters were real. All of the situations are real and carefully researched. The reality of the conditions in New York City during the Revolution and British occupation of the city and the subsequent inculcation of the British life style upon the city was real. The historical figures all existed, Nathan Hale was hung as a spy in 1776, Major John Andre did attempt to buy the plans of West Point from Benedict Arnold, Arnold did desert the American Army for a position with the British; even John Paulding and Robert Townsend lived. Avi interweaves the life of Sophia Calderwood so vividly with these men of history that one will find them self search the Internet for Sophia Calderwood. If she had truly existed, no doubt she would hold the same place in history as Martha Washington, Abigail Adams, Deborah Sampson, Dolly Madison.
    This is a story for girls although boys would benefit from reading this genre and this story. The main character is a 12 and then 15-year-old girl. It is told through her eyes and perspective. All to often we find stories for one gender or the other and boys and girls will ‘stick’ with that genre or subject matter thinking that is written only for them. Both will benefit from reading this story, as they will experience a girl asking very ‘girlie’ questions responding to them as a young woman in a male dominated world. Readers will learn the position of women in the later 18th century and the value of women for the country they too desired to be a part of and serve.
    Written for students’ grades four through seven, teachers will find a helpful glossary, endnotes, and bibliography at the end of the book and historical maps at the beginning of the book placing the reader in the places the story takes place. Not an informational text, teachers will be able to align the Common Core State Standards (CCSS) for reading literature grades four through seven with this story. Using this book as part of a unit in Colonial history or as a book club book in the reader’s workshop students will be able to quote the text, determine a theme, compare and contrast characters, determine the meaning of academic and historic vocabulary, understand how chapters fit together, describe the narrator’s point of view and narrative style and how that point of view will influence the reader and the out come of the story. And, with other students reading other works of historical fiction compare and contrast different books. Written responses to the literature may include journal writing, map making, letter writing, encoding and decoding narratives to tell a story. Students may also take positions of determining the characters’ guilt of innocence in developing persuasive writing samples defending or condemning the characters’ actions. These are all outlined in the CCSS 4 – 7. RL 1 – 10.
    This is a rich text that not only provides a source for teaching history through literature but also epitomizes great story telling.

  • Diane

    As the war begins, Sophia Calderwood's family is in turmoil: her brother, serving in the army, is missing. Her father has been injured and they are forced to take in a British officer, John Andre. She is drawn to Andre, though he is the enemy. Being the only child left, Sophia must find gainful employment to help her family. She is soon taken in as a servant to the supreme commander of British forces. A position that could be very advantageous to someone who can listen and not be noticed. Soon, she is recruited by the mysterious Mr. Townsend to report anything that she thinks might be of importance. When she hears about a traitor in the midst of the American army, she knows she must relay this information before West Point is taken by the British.

    Disappointed in this one. The narrator comes off as a bit of a drama queen ... too dramatic for a girl who finds herself in the spy business. Her deliberations about John Andre go on interminably and weakens her character. And then the whole idea that the narrator is relaying some information to us that she "received after the fact" is clunky and distracting.

  • Kay Hommedieu

    Another great historical fiction book by Newbery author, Avi. This one is set during the Revolutionary War told in first person by a young patriot named Sophia who proves to be a very special young woman who makes her way around the city working for the two printers who had employed her father before he became injured. She soon becomes involved in gathering information for a gentleman who is impressed by her pluckiness and helps her find a job as a house keeper in the British headquarters. At this job she becomes very involved in passing on the information that she learns there. Yes, she is a spy at the age of fifteen!

  • Yennie

    Absolutely tedious. More concerned with laying out historic information than proper storytelling, and despite the immense effort to sound true to the time period, the narration feels detached and not one bit like a girl. The final section even pulls a Twilight Saga maneuver and changes narrative perspective because the author wrote himself into a corner by making the story first person. Had to force myself to finish it because I'm reading it for work.

  • Alexander Johnson

    I LOVED IT!!!! 9/10 Great Book!

  • Erin Chick

    My 11 y.o. daughter was assigned this book to read for school and when I saw it was historical fiction and about the Revolutionary War, I found the book at the library and we read it together. I loved the Re-telling through Sophia’s eyes. My daughter and I agree that Sophia was very BRAVE and COURAGEOUS!! She endured so much for being so young. I enjoyed the little bit of romance weaved in (a very PG level, more of a crush!). We enjoyed the authors note at the end to learn which pieces were truth and which were fiction. I hope this encourages her to choose this genre again!

  • Kristin

    If you like history about the American Revolutionary War with a strong young heroine, this book is for you. Avi loosely follows history through the fictional character Sophie as she uncovers the plot to attack West Point. I didn’t realize West Point was such a strategic location. It’s downfall would have most likely caused the American Revolution to end in Great Britains’s favor. The more I read about the American Revolution, the more I am amazed the war turned out in the colonies’ favor! A wonderful entry in the historical fiction genre for middle grade readers. This book really makes history come alive!

  • Alex Baugh

    Avi has always been a favorite in our house and his latest book, Sophia's War, is another addition to his oeuvre of historical fiction that doesn't fail to satisfy. This time Avi takes the reader back to the American Revolution.

    For 12 year old Sophia Calderwood, the revolutionary war is personal. Forced to flee with her mother and father when the British attack and seize lower Manhattan, on her return, Sophia and her mother witness, first, the hanging of Nathan Hale by the British for being a spy and second, the burnt remains of part of their lower New York settlement. Fortunately, the Calderwood house, though ransacked, is still standing.

    Sophia's father had thought it wise to remain at a friend's house in northern Manhattan, but he soon shows up at home with a gunshot in him arm. It is decided that he will remain sequestered at home for now, since he is a known patriot and needs to recover. As for Sophia's brother William, a soldier fighting under General Washington, there has been no news of him for a while.

    On top of all this, with the British now in charge, the Calderwoods are forced to billet a soldier. Lieutenant John André, handsome, cultured and kind, arrives at their door and Sophia is immediately taken in by his attention and many charms.
    "In short, having never met so well bred and civilized a man as John André, I was greatly flattered by the attention. Indeed, I was nothing less than enthralled." (pg 56)
    When Sophia lets slip to John André the her brother is a patriot, he lets her know that he will keep the information to himself, and that he will do whatever he can to help her family. So naturally, when Sophia discovers her brother seriously ill and starving in one of the British prisons known for their deplorable conditions, she is sure John André will help him.

    The news that John André has been ordered to go to Staten Island immediately, prompts the Calderwoods to ask if he will help William. When Sophia confronts him about this, he tells her he cannot do anything, that his honor as a British officer is the most important thing in the world to him. But when Sophia reminds him that he had promised that, if needed, he would anything he could for her, he responds that a promise to a 12 year old is not like a pledge to a lady, and that she is not yet a lady.

    Shaken to her core by this, Sophia vows to save William.

    Fast forward to 1780, the war is still being fought. Sophia is now 15, working in a print shop to help her family out. There, because she can read, she is recruited as a spy for the Americans. Placed in the home of British General Clinton as a housemaid, she is asked to report any information she finds. But just as she discovers a plot of treasonous proportions involving an American general and her old friends John André, the person she reports to has disappeared for safety reasons.

    What to do with all this information? Here is Sophia's opportunity to get revenge on John André for failing to help William by exposing the plot she has uncovered. Can a young 15 year old succeed against all odds and possibly change the tide of the war?

    Sophia's War was an exciting book to read. Avi has taken a real event of the American Revolution that has many aspects to it that have never been explained and offers a cogent explanation. And why not? This is what historical fiction is all about. All the places and events, as well as most of the characters in Sophia's War are real and you will probably recognize them from history lessons. It is told in the voice of self-conscious narrator Sophia, who directly addresses her readers in several places, making it sound plausible, while at the same time reminding us she is a fiction.

    I thought this was one of Avi's best novels and I have loved all of them. My one reservation about Sophia's War was the revenge aspect of her motivation. But, of course, in the end, there is much to learn from Sophia's motivations. Do read this novel is you enjoy good historical fiction.

    This book is recommended for readers age 10+
    This book was borrowed from Webster Branch of the NYPL

  • Margo Tanenbaum

    The versatile Avi, who won a Newbery years back for his historical novel Crispin: The Cross of Lead, pens a real historical thriller in his latest novel, Sophia's War, set during the American Revolution. This is definitely my favorite Avi novel since The True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle. Like that celebrated adventure/historical nove, Sophia's War features an indomitable young heroine, who thrusts herself in the center of political and military intrigue during one of the most famous betrayals in American history.

    The novel opens in 1776 in loyalist-occupied New York City, the same setting for Laurie Halse Anderson's Seeds of America novels Chains, and Forge. Twelve-year old Sophia Calderwood adores her older brother, William, who has enlisted in the revolutionary army. Although she's a well-educated young woman who is well-versed in all the revolutionary rhetoric of the time, Sophia can't help herself when she becomes infatuated with the handsome and charming British officer, John Andre, who is billeted with her family. But when her brother becomes a prisoner in the horrible prison ships off the coast of New York and Andre refuses to help, Sophia's feelings change, and soon she is eager to avenge her brother's fate.

    When Sophia is approached by an acquaintance to spy for the revolutionaries by working as a maid at the British general's grand house, she discovers a nefarious plot--one which involves not only the handsome John Andre, but her hero, the acclaimed American officer Benedict Arnold. Can she pass on what she knows to the revolutionary command, and will anyone believe her?

    This is a tremendously exciting novel, one which I devoured in one sitting. Told in the first person by Sophia, the novel is fast-paced, and action-packed. While easy to read, the novel includes 18th century phrases scattered through the text, giving Sophia an authentic voice for the period without making the text too difficult for middle grade readers to read. A few of the colorful phrases, such as "bosky," sent me to the glossary of 18th century words included in the backmatter. Avi also includes an Author's Note, which explains that the characters of Sophia, her parents, and brother, are entirely fictitious, but the other figures who populate the novel are real enough and the stories of the American prisoners in New York and the handsome British officer John Andre are as historically accurate as he could write them.

    Avi concludes his note with a passionate defense of historical fiction: "History provides endlessly amazing stories. Historical fiction, I believe, can illuminate these stories with the ordinary people who make extraordinary history...Truth may be stranger than fiction, but fiction makes truth a friend, not a stranger."

    Thanks, Avi, for another terrific historical title for young people to add to your impressive canon of over 70 works.

  • Kristin

    A slow starter that gradually grows into a thrilling tale of espionage set during the American Revolution! This book has classic children's literature written all over it in the vein of stories like My Brother Sam Is Dead, The Witch of Blackbird Pond and Johnny Tremain. Avi mixes hefty amounts of period vocabulary and language with real historical figures to successful effect. Sophia Calderwood becomes a spy in the home of British General Clinton in hopes of avenging her brother's death at the onset of the war. It is there that she learns of a plot between a British officer who boarded in her family's home when she was 12 and a famous Continental general. Torn between duty to her country and her brother's memory and her lingering childhood feelings for the charming enemy officer who once lodged in her home, Sophia must decide which side she is on as the time draws near for the plot to be executed.

    A little heavy on historical detail at times, but overall the reader can learn a lot about the period without growing so bored as to put the book down. Sophia is an admirable and realistic heroine, who behaves fairly authentically for a girl her age; she ages from 12 to 15 by the end of the story. The ending was a little dramatic, and I had trouble believing in the depth of some of Sophia's feelings, but on the whole, this was a riveting tale of espionage. And, the spy is a girl - a great hook to use during a book talk!

  • Aleta

    3 1/2 stars.

    SPOILERS ahead!

    Man, it's hard to tell how I feel about this book. I may or may not change my rating

    Pro's: It was an engaging read. It used (as far as I know) historically accurate language, with a glossary included in the back for the more complicated words.
    It wasn't dumbed down, like many other middle grade historical fictions I've read. The author treated you like a competent individual, when it came to the vocabulary.

    Cons: I strongly disliked Sophia's infatuation with John Andrè. I found it completely unnecessary. The whole point is that Sophia wanted to avenge her brother's gruesome death, but that fact was clouded over by her feelings for Andrè. As a reader it felt like she more just wanted to force an acknowledgement from him, and receive some sort of recognition. Even Sophia herself at one point wonders if this is the case!
    Parts of the book is bogged down with paragraphs of her contemplating what her feelings are for him, and what they mean. They are then followed by a brief sentence like, But I'm still a Patriot!

    I feel like I couldn't get fully behind Sophia's character because of that. It was hard when her motives were so tainted by her feelings for Andrè.

    Also she was an awful spy! She was clumsy with her spying, and am I really to believe she didn't think to bring food on her journey? Really?

    Ultimately it had some wasted potential, which was such a shame, since it was so engaging.

  • Amy-Jo Conant

    Lexie - 730
    DRA - 60
    GRL - Y

    You don't have to love historical fiction to appreciate this book.

    This is a story set during Revolutionary times that picks up after the Boston massacre and battle of Lexington and Concord.

    Readers follow Sophia through a physical and emotional journey. The story is split into two major parts. There is an important event that separates the two times periods which I will not mention.

    Both of the sections of the book are good but I preferred the second half which was quick in pace and had you a bit more on your seat. Sophia is older and wiser and had to deal issues that are more difficult and complicated.

    The opening scene is intense. It depicts the hanging of an important patriot. The books is about war so readers need to know there is death, loss, prison conditions etc. it's not a glorious depiction of war. At the end of the book the author discussed the research techniques and the importance of being historically accurate. Also discussed are the made if portions since this is historical FICTION.

    Themes explored:
    Bravery
    Family bonds
    Revolution
    Women's rights

    Readers should also know that there is a mild romance theme. Sophia is very fond of the British officer that comes to live at their home. It is a large enough part of the story that follows through out both parts that I wanted to mention it.

  • Meg

    We have this marked as a 'middle reader' at Skylight, which we describe as literature for those roughly 8-12 years old. And Avi writes smart, complex books for that age range. He creates heroines who face challenging situations, and whose own motives are often more nuanced and less straightforward than in much children's literature. Sophia's War is a perfect example of that. Her internal emotional battle is balanced not only with a suspenseful plot but also with a really rich portrait of revolutionary New York. Part of what kept me intrigued was the detailed description of Manhattan while occupied by British troops - Avi brings in an incredible amount of political and military history without seeming too didactic.

    And as usual, Avi pays close attention to gender dynamics and highlights both the constraints and possibilities his characters face. "The world being what it is, Miss Calderwood," Sophia is told at one point, "your being a girl shall mask your true occupation." She discovers the truth in this statement, and uses it to her advantage.

    If I were 10 again, my guess is I'd be rereading this constantly right along with my copy of The True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle.


  • Kathleen

    This was a pretty quick read, both because of the vocabulary and the quickness with which the action started. It should be a good choice to recommend to 4th-7th graders learning about the American Revolution, especially girls! I found it to be very enjoyable, and until I read this,
    Toliver's Secret was my favorite to recommend, because it's about a girl taking action and making a real difference, not just standing by and waiting for the men to come home. Now, SOPHIA'S WAR will make it a pair. There's a whiff of romance, as well as some terrifically researched historical info, and Avi has come through again with admirable female characters who take an active role in deciding their own futures. Another decent choice for historical fiction about the American Revolution was
    An Enemy Among Them, which deals with immigrant communities and assimilation (a big deal here in NYC), and also has the romance touch--appealing to girls at a certain age, but a turnoff for the boys, mostly.

  • DanielandBrenna Capon

    This is a very quick, if not entirely plausible, and interesting story from the Revolution. I highly recommend this book to enhance studies of this time period and endear the events to the reader. There are lots of parallels to My Brother Sam is Dead, just as a point of information. While maintaining a compelling storyline, it does not neglect to provide a latent education on the events surrounding the traitor- turning of Benedict Arnold. I am a hearty proponent of books that manage to fix historical events into one's mind through story, rather than through dry textbook material that has no hold on the affections. In this category, Sophia's War excels.

  • Patti

    Engagingly written and often suspenseful, "Sophia's War" takes place in the years 1776 and 1780, primarily in New York City. Its young protagonist finds herself involved in gathering intelligence for the patriot cause. For the most part I found it historically accurate and highly readable, but in the end it caused me to suspend disbelief just a little too much to give it a 5-star rating. Revolutionary War era aficionados will enjoy many of the characters taken straight from the history books (John Andre is a main character) and accounts of the Culper spy ring.

  • Jewell

    Sophia's War by Avi- is a wonderful historical novel combined with a young girl's rite-of-passage. Sophia grows from a naïve innocent to a strong young woman who becomes a patriot and Revolutionary War spy who uncovers a plot by Benedict Arnold. Great concrete and historical detail. Avi is in top form.

  • Teresa

    Historical fiction for older children/teens that is based on factual accounts regarding the American Revolutionary War in New York, the treatment of captured soldiers and spy's. I bought this book after seeing the author, Avi, speak one year. I've always loved his books and this one is no exception.

  • Bekie

    Although the cover is striking and the premise intriguing, I found this book to be a huge disappointment. The writing and story did not captivate as some of AVI’s other books have. Skip this one and read The True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle instead. Or if interested in the Andre/Arnold story watch AMC’s mini series TURN in lieu of this read.

  • Kala Hundley

    If you love a strong female lead, this book will have you enraptured. Sophia is a young girl who takes charge of her life after tragedy. I read this with my students and they enjoyed the bravery of the main character, and how well they could connect to Sophia. I would recommend this to anyone, but especially someone who works with younger children.