As a child, I was an avid reader and particularly fell in love with historical fiction. My favourite corner for reading was on top of the woodbox by my grandmotherās cookstove. Warm and cozy, I delved into such books as Geoffrey Treaseās Cue for Treason and Jack Schaefferās Shane. How wonderful to land for a few hours in the world of Shakespeareās London or the grasslands of the frontier west. When I worked as a childrenās librarian and then began writing books myself, this early love has remained with meāso it factored into the books I chose for schoolsāand some of the novels I wrote such as The Runaway and Firebird.
When I decided to build a narrative around a teen trying to reunite with the only family he has left, I Am David, a novel I loved when I studied and then taught Childrenās Literature, was often in my thoughts. David, the young boy in the story has been interned in a dreadful POW camp in Bulgaria during WW II. Once he escapes, he treks across Europe in search of his mother who he thinks may be alive somewhere in Denmark. It is a journey that helps him regain some trust in mankind even in the presence of evil at his heels. When we watch newscasts today and see the haunted faces of children in refugee camps, Davidās story continues to speak powerfully to us.
This is the story of a young boy's journey through Europe after escaping from the camp where he has lived all his life. Faced with a host of new experiences, David gradually begins to understand the world around him.
This verse novel primarily sets the stage for a crucial journey Phoebe, a sixteen-year-old slave, living on a Virginia tobacco plantation in 1858, decides to make that will take her north to freedom. I like to write poetry myself and have favourites among verse novels that have proliferated in recent years. This is one of them. The poetry here is beautifully-crafted and underlines the power of language Phoebe has discovered, having taught herself to read. Pignat alternates viewpoints as she presents a cast of characters that includes a Canadian doctor posing as a birdwatcher who helps slaves escape. Bird imagery is a motif throughout the bookāso apt in detailing a flight to a new world.
Award-winning author Caroline Pignatās new historical novel recreates the world of a Virginia tobacco plantation in 1858. Through the different points of view of slaves, their masters and a visiting bird-watcher the world of the plantation comes to live in this verse novel. Phoebe belongs to Master Duncan and works in the plantation kitchen. She sees how the other slaves are treated ā the beatings and whippings, the disappearances. She hasnāt seen her mother since Master Duncan sold her ten years ago. But Pheobe is trying to learn words and how to read and when she is asked to showā¦
It amuses me that Iām now old enough to have lived at a time young readers now would consider āhistoricalā. Growing up in Canada in the 1950s and ā60s, the Civil Rights movement in the States seemed distant but, in coming years as I read books about it, literature made it immediate. None more so than this chronicle of the journey a somewhat madcap family makes from their home in Michigan to Birmingham where Grandma Sands lives. The story is narrated by fourth-grader Kenny but his older brother Byron, who attracts trouble like static electricity, figures prominently. Much of the novel is laugh-out-loud funny until Kenny nearly drowns in a river and little sister Joey goes to Sunday school the day the Baptist Church is bombed.
Celebrate the 25th anniversary of the Newbery and Coretta Scott King Honoree about an unforgettable family on a road-trip during one of the most important times in the civil rights movement.
When the Watson family-ten-year-old Kenny, Momma, Dad, little sister Joetta, and brother Byron-sets out on a trip south to visit Grandma in Birmingham, Alabama, they don't realize that they're heading toward one of the darkest moments in America's history. The Watsons' journey reminds us that even in the hardest times, laughter and family can help us get through anything.
Iāve read this book several times and I donāt believe I ever manage to get through it without shedding a few tears. Have tissues handy. A Mennonite family living in Ukraine in the 1920s has their village destroyed by Russian soldiers. The central character, ten-year-old Peter Neufeld, makes a decision to help his older brother Otto escape after heās participated in counter-attacks, going against the familyās adherence to passive resistance. The Neufelds decide to leave a land of oppression and move to Canada where they will make an effort to assimilate rather than live apart as they have in Ukraine. Itās a journey filled with challenges and heartbreak, but always with the strength of love of family and humanity as a sustaining factor.
Secrets, lies, and second chances are served up beneath the stars in this moving novel by the bestselling author of This Is Not How It Ends.Ā Think White Lotus meets Virgin River set at a picturesque mountain inn.
Seven days in summer. Eight lives forever changed. The stage isā¦
Iām always on the lookout for fiction in which the writing itself is dazzling. Eva Ibbotsonās prose is truly something to savour and this novel is the jewel in her crown. Maia, an orphan, is sent from England to stay with distant relatives, the Carters, in Manaus, Brazil. The family is weird and mean but Maia finds two young friendsāClovis, an actor, and Finn, who is partly a Brazilian native, but heir to his British grandfatherās fortune. Clovis longs to return to England and Finn happily changes places with him. Finn and Maia journey down the Amazon (the āRiver Seaā) to live with his Xanti people. Expect humour, high adventure, and a richly-detailed look at life in early 20th century Brazil.
It is 1910 - Maia, orphaned at 13, travels from England to start a new life with distant relatives in Manaus, hundreds of miles up the Amazon. She is very unhappy with her exceptionally bizarre new family but befriends Finn, a mysterious English boy who lives with the local Indians and shares her passion for the jungle. Then Finn's past life catches up with him and they are forced to flee far upriver in a canoe, pursued by an assortment of brilliantly eccentric characters that only Eva Ibbotson could invent.
Set during World War I when thousands of Ukrainian immigrants were interned in concentration camps all across Canada, Firebird follows the journey of fourteen-year-old Alex Kaminsky, searching for an older brother who has disappeared. Riding the rails, staying with an immigrant Norwegian family in Edmonton and then, when authorities are on his trail, finding sanctuary with an elderly school teacher in Calgary, Alex finally discovers Marco close to death in a camp in Banff.
My hope is that Firebird will allow young people of today to walk for a while in the shoes of these Canadian immigrant boysāback in the midst of a war that tore families apart not only on the battlefields of Europe but in the quieter corners of Canada.
This is Detective Chief Superintendent Fran Harman's first case in a series of six books. Months from retirement Kent-based Fran doesn't have a great life - apart from her work. She's menopausal and at the beck and call of her elderly parents, who live in Devon. But instead of lighteningā¦
Lenore James, a woman of independent means who has outlived three husbands, is determined to disentangle her brother Gilbert from the beguiling Charlotte Eden. Chafing against misogyny and racism in the post-Civil War South, Lenore learns that Charlotteās husband is enmeshed in the re-enslavement schemes of a powerful judge, andā¦