This reminds me of family lore that just gets better and better the more it is told. It's really funny! My favorite part is where they sabotage the enemy soldier's shirts and make them itchy....so all the soldiers end up naked and the war has to end because they have nothing to wear.
I'm not totally sure that the author is Canadian, but it does say she lives in Montreal and the book is part of the National Film Board collection. The film actually has a few more details than the book does (like a bit on Tonya Harding's skate in the 1994 Olympics where she was allowed to start over)
https://www.nfb.ca/film/my_grandmother_ironed_the_king_shirts/
Goodreads says:
One of three new titles in the Firefly Books-National Film Board of Canada partnership.
This tall tale of Kove's Norwegian grandmother was nominated for an Academy Award when first produced as an animated short film.
Torill Kove's grandmother often told stories to Torill when she was a young girl. One in particular revolved around ironing shirts for the King of Norway.
In My Grandmother Ironed the King's Shirts, Kove follows a thread of family history, embroidering it with playful twists along the way, imaginatively rendering her grandmother's life and work in Oslo during World War II.
In Kove's retelling, her grandmother leads a Norwegian resistance to the invading German Army who had forced the King to flee for his safety.
When the task of ironing the King's shirts was replaced by those of the German Army officers, Kove's grandmother and her shirt pressing sisters sabotage the enemy uniforms until morale among the Germans is so low that they lose the war and head home without a thing to wear!
Full of sharp humor and myth making, My Grandmother Ironed the King's Shirts is a great example of how small contributions to the greater good count for a whole lot.
My Grandmother Ironed the King's Shirts was nominated for an Oscar in 2000 and won 17 awards in all. It has also been produced as a book in Norway.
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