Suvarna Garge (Editor)

I Am David

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
8
/
10
1
Votes
Alchetron
8
1 Ratings
100
90
81
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
Rate This

Rate This

Original title
  
Jeg er David

Language
  
Danish

Published in English
  
1965

Author
  
Anne Holm

Country
  
Denmark


Translator
  
L. W. Kingsland

Publication date
  
1963

Originally published
  
1963

Page count
  
191

I Am David t3gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcRd7v9tzMSBtv2

Media type
  
Print (hardback and paperback)

Genres
  
Children's literature, Historical drama

Publishers
  
Gyldendal, Methuen Publishing (UK)

Similar
  
Children's literature, Classical Studies books

I am david anne holm book trailer


I am David is a 1963 novel by Anne Holm. It tells the story of a young boy who, with the help of a prison guard, escapes from a concentration camp in an unnamed Eastern European country (according to geographical clues, probably Bulgaria) and journeys to Denmark. Along the way he meets many people who teach him about life outside the camp.

Contents

The book, originally written in Danish, has been translated into several languages, including Norwegian, Swedish, Finnish and German (all 1963), Dutch (1964), English (1965), Afrikaans (1981), French (1986) and Konkani (1987). In the United States, the book was first called North to Freedom, but it is now also being published as I am David. It was made into a film in 2003.

I am david chapter 1


Plot

12 -year-old David has lived in a concentration camp for as long as he can remember. While the people who run the camp are only referred to as them, later in the book it is stated that they came to power in 1917, indicating that the captors are Communists.

His only friend in the camp, Johannes, died some time before, but one of the commandants has been keeping an eye on David, making sure he is fed properly and taking his vitamins. This guard sets up the escape, gives him some soap, and leaves a sack outside the camp fence with bread, a bottle of water, and a compass in it. David must go south to Salonika, find a boat to Italy, then travel north to a free country that has a king.

David uses the excuse that he works for a circus to explain why he is a polyglot and why he is travelling (to catch up with the circus which has gone ahead). On his way, he helps people, and sometimes they give him money. Along his journey, David discovers the beauty of the world and slowly he changes his behavior and the way he interacts with people.

He saves a girl named Maria from a fire in a shed where she was trapped. David spends some time in Maria's family's house, where he sees a globe and learns about different countries. However, his knowledge of suffering and death worries the parents. David overhears them talking about him and, after writing them a letter, leaves the house to travel north again. Some time later he sees a newspaper personal advertisement placed by Maria's family, offering him a home and saying they understand his reticence.

David has also been praying to the God of green pastures, and a priest explains that while some people say there are many gods, there really is only one.

When he meets Sophie, a middle-aged lady who lives in Switzerland and likes to paint as a hobby, she asks David if she might paint him; later she invites David to have lunch with her in her house, and while he is there, David sees a picture of a woman in Denmark. Sophie tells him that the woman's husband and her child, a boy named David, were killed, but that a guard who was attracted to the woman allowed her to escape. He realizes he needs to travel to Denmark and find that woman, who is his mother. He also realizes that the guard, who became the commandant, has saved him because he was in love with David's mother. However, because she did not love him back, and he felt a need for revenge, he did not tell her that David was still alive.

When winter hits, David is travelling through the mountains, and he is held prisoner by a farmer who uses him for slave labor. It is a hard season, but he is grateful to shelter at night in the farmer's stable until the snow melts. The farmer's dog, King, keeps him company through the winter. David knows that as the snow melts, he must escape from the bolted stable, as the farmer will soon hand him to the police. He makes a hole in the stable, digs a tunnel, and is free again. King catches up with him. Later, the dog gives his life to distract some guards so that David can sneak over the border. David travels on through Denmark to Copenhagen where he looks up his mother's address in a telephone book. Virtually at the end of his strength he knocks on the door and introduces himself to his mother whom he recognizes from the picture he saw of her in Switzerland. His mother instantly recognizes him as her son David.

Awards

  • Crystal Heart Award
  • Heartland Film Festival
  • Lewis Carroll Shelf Award
  • American Library Association Notable Book
  • Best Scandinavian Children's Book
  • Boys Club of America Junior Book Award Gold Medal
  • Release details

  • David, [København] Gyldendal, 1963 (first edition)
  • I am David, Orlando, Fla. : Harcourt, 2004, ISBN 0-15-205161-9 (hc), ISBN 0-15-205160-0 (pbk)
  • The Best Scandinavian Children's Book awarded in 1995
  • References

    I Am David Wikipedia