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46 pages 1 hour read

Lauren Tarshis

I Survived The Shark Attacks Of 1916

Fiction | Novel | Middle Grade | Published in 2010

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Background

Historical Context: Jersey Shore Shark Attacks of 1916

I Survived the Shark Attacks of 1916 is based on real events that occurred on the Jersey Shore in 1916. A heat wave and a polio outbreak that summer meant that more people than usual came from cities to seaside resorts such as those on the Jersey Shore, and many people swam in the area every day. Four people were killed by sharks and one injured. In the afterword of I Survived the Shark Attacks of 1916, Tarshis explains that the people mentioned in the newspaper articles—Charles Vansant, Charles Bruder, Lester Stillwell, and Stanley Fisher—were all real victims of the 1916 attacks. A 12-year-old boy, Joseph Dunn, was the inspiration for Tarshis’s fictional character Chet Roscow, as Dunn did suffer a bite to his leg from the shark, much like Chet does. Three of the deaths occurred in the Matawan Creek where Chet plays and is bitten. While there are many theories, the causes of the 1916 shark attacks are unknown.

Before these events, sharks were generally considered harmless and timid in the US. In the novel, when the shark attacks begin, Uncle Jerry tells Chet and his friends, “a shark simply will not attack a human. That cherry pie over there is more likely to attack you than a shark is” (10-11). This reflects the limited knowledge and understanding that people had about sharks at the time the story takes place. Tarshis provides historical context for these widely held misconceptions about the dangers of sharks: “There were no real marine biologists in those days, no scuba gear or submarines for underwater exploration. There had never been close studies of sharks” (89). After the attacks, ichthyologists conducted more studies about sharks. The attacks led to sharks becoming synonymous with terror in American popular culture.

Series Context: I Survived Series

I Survived the Shark Attacks of 1916 is the second installment in Lauren Tarshis’s acclaimed I Survived young-adult historical fiction series. In each text, Tarshis explores a significant historical event through the lens of a young person who survived the event. The series includes I Survived the Sinking of the Titanic, 1912 (2010) and I Survived the Bombing of Pearl Harbor, 1941 (2011). While Tarshis’s characters are works of fiction, many details in the books are historical fact.

The I Survived series seeks to engage young readers in learning about significant historical events and how they have shaped the world by teaching lessons of resilience and survival. In an interview with Scholastic Kids Press, Tarshis explains: “I try to create characters who are not superhuman. Survivors understand that being brave doesn’t mean that you can’t be scared [...] I also think the survivors are the ones who get help” (Suprenant, Maxwell. “I Survived: A Conversation With Lauren Tarshis.” Scholastic Kids Press, 28 Aug. 2016). Chet experiences this firsthand when his friends, the boys he struggles to trust throughout the text, are the ones who pull him from the shark’s jaws at the end.

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