“There’s a Place in the World for an Angry Young Man…”
Thus proving that there’s a Billy Joel quote for everything, folks. But seriously–I listened to Phillip Hoose’s The Boys Who Challenged Hitler: Knud Pedersen and the Churchill Club because a)I was interested and b)my oldest read it as part of a school project and wanted me to, and Knud Pedersen was a seriously angry young man. I’m not saying he didn’t have a right to be, you understand; Hitler declared Denmark a protectorate in April of 1940, and its government submitted within hours with pretty much no fighting involved. Pedersen was a patriotic Dane and found this humiliating, especially in contrast to Norway’s efforts to fight back against essentially the same “protectorate” deal. His anger and humiliation ultimately led him, his older brother, and various school friends to conduct a schoolboy campaign of sabotage against their German occupiers. They continued for months, their actions escalating, until they were caught and sent to prison–but not before their courage had ignited the spark that became the Danish resistance. Essentially, they sowed a seed that ended up growing into a fairly respectably sized sunflower.
So–the pros:
- The story was fascinating.
- Much of it was told in Pedersen’s own words.
And the cons?
- Knud’s teenage boy anger (and competitiveness) was slightly wearying by the end. (I’m clearly getting old.)
- That anger made it feel like the campaign was more against the Nazis than for Denmark. (I doubt they saw it that way, but they were furious at their own country as well as Germany, and you definitely felt that.)
The verdict? Totally worth your time, especially since it’s a lesser known piece of history. Just be prepared to share some space with an angry young man for two hundred pages or so.