"…[a] collection of first-rate essays … The contributors not only demonstrate their familiarity with key texts by writers such as Michael Rothberg, Kenneth Kidd, and Hamida Bosmajian but also add significant new information and perspectives … Highly recommended." — CHOICE"This carefully curated collection of essays draws on vital scholarship in children's literature and trauma studies to examine how aesthetic works produced by, for, and about young people address moments of historical atrocity that often defy representation. What is particularly impressive is its global scope: its contributors are scholars from around the world, and their respective pieces address traumatic events and structures of violence in Africa, Australia, East Asia, Europe, and North America. Overall, the collection demonstrates how young people's unique experiences of individual and collective trauma demand new ways of theorizing both childhood and atrocity." — Anastasia Ulanowicz, author of Second-Generation Memory and Contemporary Children's Literature: Ghost Images