Thursday, August 8, 2024

Trajectory by Cambria Gordon

It is May 1942 and seventeen-year-old Eleanor Schiff lives with her twelve-year-old sister Sarah and her parents in Jenkintown, a small suburb in Philadelphia. Eleanor's father is a brilliant mathematician who suffered a devastating stroke that left his speech slurred and his body damaged. Eleanor is called out of her father's study where she is pretending to read Life Magazine but is really working on calculus. Her mother wants her to help with the Shabbos meal preparations. Soon her Uncle Herman, Aunt Jona and their seven-year-old twins, Jacob and Lila arrive.

At dinner conversation turns to the events in Poland. Eleanor had been corresponding with her ten-year-old cousin, Batja, whose father, Azriel is a first cousin of her mother and Uncle Herman.  Her uncle tells them that all the Jews in the Stanislau ghetto must wear shite armbands with blue stars of David to identify them as Jews. The ghetto is guarded by the German Schutzpolizei and the Ukrainian militia. The Jewish police guard it from the inside, something that shocks Eleanor's family. The ghetto holds an unbelievable twenty thousand Jews within a few city blocks. Uncle Herman has also heard that there are "selections" or "aktions" where those who are unable to work because they are old or sick are sent to die.

After dinner, while out with her friend, Trudie at Oswald's Drug Store for a soda, Eleanor learns about a MathMeet being held at 11 AM at the Women's Club on Saturday morning. Even though she feels she shouldn't attend the meeting, Eleanor sneaks into the meeting without registering and handily solves all the problems including the last and most difficult one.  However, on her way out, Eleanor is approached by the organizer, Mary Mauchly, who wants to return Eleanor's notebook which she has left behind. Mary notes that Eleanor was the only one able to solve the last problem. Mary who is associated with the Moore School of Electrical Engineering at the University of Pennsylvania, tells her that the MathMeet is a ruse to scout for women computers for the U.S. Army. She invites Eleanor to join a new team she's instructing but Eleanor turns her down and flees.

The following day, while Eleanor and her mom walk her dad through the Morris Arboretum in his chair, she considers what happened after the MathMeet. Afterwards at home, Eleanor recalls her father's stroke and how she feels responsible for what happened to him. As a result their life changed drastically: no more faculty banquets, no more volunteer work. Their vibrant life lost. Eleanor's unique math abilities were recognized in kindergarten but she ripped up the teacher's note. She has spent her childhood hiding her ability, throwing math tests, trying not to sound too smart or too dumb and quickly earning the nickname "Nervous Nellie". Eleanor felt that because she took away her father's gift she had no right to hers. Thankfully a phone call changes everything. Mary Mauchly tries again to recruit Eleanor, this time telling her the pay is $1400 a year plus overtime. This would be enough money for Eleanor's family to hire a nurse for her father and to buy extra ration stamps.

When Eleanor decides to accept Mary Mauchly's offer, little does she realize that she will contribute significantly to the war effort and finally confront the trauma she experienced years ago.

Discussion

In Trajectory, a family tragedy forms the backstory of a young woman whose remarkable mathematics abilities see her recruited as a human computer to help the American war effort during the Second World War. 

Seventeen-year-old Eleanor Schiff believes she is responsible for her brilliant mathematician-father's stroke when she was six years old. This trauma leads Eleanor to believe that because she took away his math mind she's doesn't deserve hers. This leads Eleanor to nurture her abilities in secret. It isn't until she is discovered by Maud Mauchly that Eleanor decides to use her abilities during the war, as a human computer. 

In the novel, Eleanor's abilities are quickly realized when she is transferred from the Philadelphia Computing Section (PCS), a secret unit of the US Army to the Muroc Army Air Base in California to work on the Norden bombsight which is supposed to guarantee high altitude precision bombing during the day. When her work there succeeds, she is transferred to Pearl Harbor to teach the bombardiers "... how to compute for turbulence and adjust trail and drift accordingly." There she encounters a pilot, Captain Haines who knew her father because he was his math professor in Pennsylvania. This encounter causes Eleanor's intense guilt and self doubt to resurface leading to an emotional and mental crisis. Eleanor's crisis is also tied to events happening overseas in Europe with the Holocaust and the "liquidation" of the Jews in the Stanislau ghetto in Stanislau, Poland. She learns that no Jews survived meaning that her relatives, Azriel, his wife Rosa and their daughter, Batja have been murdered.

Fortunately, Eleanor is able to unburden herself to her parents who reassure her that her father's stroke was not her fault. This resolution is well portrayed by the author and is very moving. Ultimately, with the help of her parents and the army rabbi, Eleanor is able to experience forgiveness and self-acceptance, allowing her to move forward and complete her mission. In the end, Eleanor grows into a more confident young woman, confident in her mathematical abilities and confident that she can contribute significantly to the war effort. 

Gordon also includes a lovely side story of a blossoming romance between Eleanor and a pilot named Sky. Although Sky is seriously wounded in a plane accident, the novel ends on a positive note with the promise of more to come for these two characters.

Gordon weaves many historical details into her story. For example when Eleanor is reading the headlines in the Philadelphia Inquirer, she learns about how the racists attitudes common in America at this time, are influencing domestic and wartime policy. When she sees the headline, First Negro Division Forms at Fort Huachuca, Eleanor wonders, "Why do Negroes need their own division in the army? Aren't we all fighting for the same cause?" Another headline, Los Angeles Japanese Americans Relocate to Santa Anita makes Eleanor realize, "That's the stables where they race the horses Uncle Herman likes to bet on. It disgusts me the way they're ripping all those people from their homes and tossing them together in dirty, cramped quarters. Like the Germans are doing to the Jews." 

When Eleanor is going through her security clearance she has to deal with sexist remarks from the men who ridicule her "Don't get P-W-O-P."  meaning don't get pregnant without permission. Eleanor notes "Ever since FDR signed the bill into law establishing an army women's corps, the newspapers have been full of stories by male reporters worried that females in the military will wreak  all kinds of sexual havoc on poor unsuspecting servicemen. Petticoat army, they call us. Wackies, too." 

There are a few weak areas the novel's storyline. One of them is Eleanor's efforts to hide her ability to do math when she is very young. In the novel, Eleanor is in kindergarten when her gift to do math is discovered by her teacher. Excited, her teacher places a note in Eleanor's lunch bag for her parents but Eleanor destroys the note so her parents won't know that she has the same gift as her father.  Somehow her parents never learn of her math abilities. Did Eleanor's kindergarten teacher never follow up when there was no response to her note? Did Eleanor's parents never meet her kindergarten teacher or any other teacher in elementary school?  There also seems to be some confusion as to how old Eleanor was when this traumatic experience occurred. In Eleanor's mind it was prior to kindergarten but later on in the novel when she is talking with Rabbi  Richmond, it is revealed that she was six years old where her father had his stroke.  

Overall, Trajectory is a well-written story and one of the few historical novels offered for young adult readers this year.

Book Details:

Trajectory by Cambria Gordon
New York: Scholastic Press     2024
285 pp.

No comments: