The Boys Start The War

The Boys Start the War is the first of many novels in a series of children's books by Phyllis Reynolds Naylor. The series is centered on two families, the Hatfords, who have four sons, Jake, Josh, Wally, and Peter, and the Malloys, who have three daughters, Eddie, Beth, and Caroline. The names Hatford and Malloy are probably a reference to the Hatfields and McCoys, actual West Virginia families who famously carried on a feud. The Malloys are temporarily staying in a house across the street to the Hatfords, which was once owned by a family of boys(the Bensons) who were best friends of the Hatford boys.

The Hatford boys resent the girls for taking their place, and the children of both families begin playing pranks on each other, without letting their parents know. Subplots in the series include the children trying to capture a loose cougar that has been frightening people in the town, Caroline's overdramatic behavior and aspirations to become an actress, Josh and Beth's brief love affair, and Jake and Eddie's rivalry. The books take place in the fictional town of Buckman, West Virginia, which is based on the actual town of Buckhannon.


Books in the series:

  • The Boys Start the War
  • The Girls Get Even
  • Boys Against Girls
  • The Girls' Revenge
  • A Traitor Among the Boys
  • A Spy Among the Girls
  • The Boys Return
  • The Girls Take Over
  • Boys in Control
  • Girls Rule
  • Boys Rock
  • Who Won the War?

Famous quotes containing the words boys, start and/or war:

    Breaking free from the delicious security of mother love can be a painful rupture for either mother or son. Some boys can’t do it. Some mothers can’t let it happen because they know the boy is not ready to leave her; others are simply not ready to give up their sons.
    Frank Pittman (20th century)

    We never become really and genuinely our entire and honest selves until we are dead—and not then until we have been dead years and years. People ought to start dead and then they would be honest so much earlier.
    Mark Twain [Samuel Langhorne Clemens] (1835–1910)

    I thought that’s what this war was about. Making people pay taxes when they didn’t have no say so about it.
    Lamar Trotti (1898–1952)