During World War II, nurse Aileen Rogers and her stuffed bear, Teddy,
greet English "guest children" sent overseas for safety. Teddy befriends
homesick, young William and his sister Grace, sharing the experience of
the cross-country train ride and five years on a host family's farm.
Based on real events.
During World War II, 10,000 children from British cities were sent to
live with host families in Canada, the United States, and other nations
away from the war zone. Bear on the Homefront tells the story of two
guest children, Grace and William Chambers, who arrive in Halifax and
meet Aileen Rogers, a nurse serving on the homefront. With her is Teddy,
the stuffed bear whose real-life trip to the front lines of World War I
and back was chronicled in A Bear in War.
Using archival images and Aileen Rogers' wartime diary, Stephanie Innes
and Harry Endrulat piece together William and Grace's journey by train
to their host family's Winnipeg farm. Readers experience the story
through Teddy's eyes as Aileen, seeing William's anxiety, lets her
stuffed friend stay with the little boy throughout the train ride and,
ultimately, throughout the war.
Brian Deines' soulful oil paintings capture the spirit of the war
years on the homefront. His expressive art communicates both the
loneliness of children separated from their families and the joyful
conclusion when Grace, William, and Teddy all return to their homes
again.