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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: 1900s, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 3 of 3
1. Book Review: Like the Willow Tree: The Diary of Lydia Amelia Pierce (Dear America Series) by Lois Lowry (Scholastic, 2011)

Recommended for ages 8-12

With the relaunch of its Dear America series last year, Scholastic is not cutting corners, recruiting some of our most beloved writers for young people to add to this acclaimed historical fiction series for young people.  This particular title, written by two-time Newbery winner Lois Lowry, chronicles the life of eleven-year-old Lydia Pierce in Portland, Maine of 1918, orphaned along with her brother by the deadly Spanish flu epidemic.  Initially sent to live with relatives who can't afford to keep them, they are then sent to be raised in a Shaker community in Sabbathday Lake

The adjustment to the world of the Shakers is difficult indeed.  Because Lydia knows nothing of the Shakers, we learn along with her through about their customs and lifestyle.  She is struck by her first view of their settlement:  "It seemed to be a whole village, but quite small, and it was amazingly tidy.  It made me think of a toy village, built for dolls."  She was shocked to have her few meager possessions taken from her, told by one of the Shaker sisters that all that they had belonged to them all.  She was equally surprised to be separated from her brother after learning that men and women's lives in the community are quite distinct; even though they consider themselves brethren and sisters, they don't converse, and have no physical contact.  Because they don't marry, they take in orphans, who are free when grown up to go "into the world" or take vows to stay in the community.  Even their language seems strange and old-fashioned to Lydia.

Although both she and her brother are struggling with their grief over the loss of their parents and baby sister, but her brother seems unusually withdrawn, and when he runs away, she can't help but worry about him.  

But as the year passes, Lydia comes to admire and even love the kindly Shaker sisters, who teach her their beautiful handicrafts, songs, ways of worship, and finally, bring her a feeling of peace. Although the book encompasses only a year in Lydia's life, Lowry provides an afterword in which she tells us what became of Lydia and her brother Daniel.  Did they stay with the Shakers or leave the religious life behind?

As is typical with this series, a historical note at the end of the novel provides invaluable context for young readers about both the outbreak of the Spanish flu epidemic and the history of the Shakers, including information on present-day Sabbathday Lake.  We also learn that Lowry was inspired to write this title after buying an old farmhouse in southwest Maine, not far from the Sabbathday Lake community, where three Shakers remain in residence.

Unlike some other titles in the Dear America series, this novel is not action-packed; instead, it contains many details about the Shaker lifestyle and not a lot of action and conflict.  The conflict in the story is more internal, dwelling on whether Lydia and Daniel can adapt their hearts to the Shaker ways.  I found that its quiet style seems to fit with the Shaker theme, and the book should appeal to those children who like more contemplative stories as well as those who might be interested in learning more about different religions in our country. 

Young people who would like to read additional books about the Shakers might consider:

1 Comments on Book Review: Like the Willow Tree: The Diary of Lydia Amelia Pierce (Dear America Series) by Lois Lowry (Scholastic, 2011), last added: 1/12/2011
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2. Tween Tuesday Book Review: Selling Hope, by Kristin O'Donnell Tubb (Feiwel and Friends, 2010)

Recommended for ages 8-12.


Release date:  November 9, 2010


It's May 1910, and people around the world are working themselves into a near frenzy over the coming of Halley's Comet.  Astronomers predict that the Earth will actually pass through the tail of the comet, and despite assurances from scientists that no harm would come to people on Earth, many are panicked, thinking the end of the world is at hand.

Author Kristin O'Donnell Tubb(check back tomorrow for an interview with Kristin!)   taking inspiration from the centenary of this Halley's Comet hysteria, has written a delightful historical novel for middle grade readers.  The story centers on 13-year old Hope, who tours with her magician father in a "small-small-time" vaudeville troupe.  Hope alternates between serving as a magician's assistant for her father and playing the role of a child medium with Cross-Eyed Jane, her roommate and mother-figure on the vaudeville circuit (Hope's own mother having died some years before the story begins).

The book's narrative begins on May 1, 1910, "Seventeen Days Till the End of the World." Hope's got more immediate worries than the impending comet however;  it's about time for the annual blue envelopes, in which the road manager, Mr. Whitting, hands out notices to those who are being fired from the show.  Hope secretly wishes that her father's act will be cut, so she can live in one city and one house, like other children.  But Hope is always practical, and she knows that if they're out of a job, they'll need money, and fast.

And the comet provides her with the perfect opportunity, when she is struck with inspiration, "almost as if the tail of the comet reached out and tapped me singly...Money. Medicine. Mints.  Yes, these people needed hope.  And I was just the one to sell it to them.  In pill form."  And who will help her with her scheme but the young Buster Keaton, appearing with his parents on the same vaudeville program as Hope and her father.  Soon she and Buster are raking in the money from Chicago residents of all ages, those who "need hope more than money."  And she's even invited by Buster to an elegant comet party at the swanky Palmer House Hotel.  It will take more than anti-comet pills, however, to make Hope feel safe and secure, as she struggles to figure out what home and family mean to her.

Tubb does a terrific job of capturing the atmosphere of the comet panic, making effective use of actual news headlines from the period to begin each chapter.  She also vividly portrays the "small-small-time" vaudeville circuit,  peppering Hope's first-person narrative with suitable vaudeville one-liners, giving a real sense of life on the vaudeville circuit.  We also learn lots of vaudeville jargon, like "coin," for customer, experience life in a cheap boarding house with its awful food and dirty rooms, and meet real-life vaudevillians in the novel, including not only Buster Keaton but other actual performers as well.

The author provides a brief list of recommended reading on various topics touched on in the novel, as well as an Author's Note that provides some additional background on the Halley's Comet appearance in 1910 and vaudeville.

For more on Buster Keaton, you might want to visit the website for the International Buster Keaton Society (t

5 Comments on Tween Tuesday Book Review: Selling Hope, by Kristin O'Donnell Tubb (Feiwel and Friends, 2010), last added: 11/2/2010
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3. Tween Tuesday Book Review: Zora and Me, by Victoria Bond and T. R. Simon (Candlewick, 2010)

Tween Tuesday is a weekly meme hosted by Green Bean Teen Queen that highlights great reads for tweens.


Recommended for ages 8-12.

Zora and Me by debut novelists Victoria Bond and T. R. Simon is one of the most anticipated children's releases this fall, and has already received a starred review in Kirkus and was selected for both the Kids Indie Next List and the Fall Okra List from the Southern Indie Booksellers.

The novel is inspired by the childhood of noted novelist and anthropologist Zora Neale Hurston, perhaps best known for her novel Their Eyes Were Watching God.   I must admit that I have never read any of Zora Neale Hurston's novels, and had no preconceived notions about her life and work before reading Zora and Me, but considering that the novel is aimed at middle grade readers, we must assume that they would have little familiarity with Zora Neale Hurston's works either, except perhaps with some of the folktales that she collected, which have been published as children's books.

The authors use Carrie, a fictional best friend of Zora, to narrate the story, which is set in Eatonville, the all-black community in Florida where Zora Neale Hurston grew up, in the year 1900. Zora, even in fourth grade, is famous for her storytelling, or her lying, depending on how you look at it. Or maybe she's just "crazy as a hoot owl," as she is described by one town resident.  But when she starts to tell wild stories of their reclusive neighbor Mr. Pendir being half alligator, half man, her classmate Stella has had enough.
"You are too lying," Stella snapped.  "You the lyingest girl in town!  You are so lying, even when you tell the truth, it comes out a lie!"
But no one cares, since "we all knew that nobody could tell a story better than Zora."  In fact the authors give us many clues that Zora is no ordinary child.  Carrie tells us that Zora "had a way of giving personality to everything in Eatonville.  Flowers alongside the road weren't just flowers.  One day they were royal guards saluting us on our walks home...that's how Zora saw things.  Everything in the world had a soul, and a soul to her meant being more than anyone counted on."  And she burns with curiosity, "shooting questions...like she was a popgun." 

The authors at first seem to paint an almost idyllic picture of life in the Jim Crow South, with scenic ponds for swimming, old ladies who have "conjure power," plenty of time to wander in the woods finding baby pigs with their friend Teddy, and free licorice sticks from Joe Clarke's general store.  But when Old Lady Bronson falls off a ledge at the Blue Sink fishing hole, Zora is convinced that Mr. Pendir--transformed into an alligator--is somehow to blame.  The mystery deepens when a decapitated body is found by the railroad tracks that the children recognize as that of a stranger, Ivory, they had met in the woods.  Zora believes that she knows who--or what--killed him--the gator-man hybrid she has conjured up in her imagination.  But the real solution to the mystery is much more ordinary, as well as more frightening, than the c

0 Comments on Tween Tuesday Book Review: Zora and Me, by Victoria Bond and T. R. Simon (Candlewick, 2010) as of 1/1/1900
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