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ONE FOOT ASHORE

After six years of involuntary servitude in colonial Brazil, Maria Ben Lazar and her younger sister Isobel escape, stowing away aboard different ships. Greene recounted Isobel's perilous journey in Out of Many Waters (1988); here, Maria has an easier time. Undiscovered aboard ship, she walks off in Amsterdam, falls in almost immediately with a kindhearted artist named Rembrandt, and eventually finds her parents, once-wealthy Portuguese Jews who are now well-to-do burghers living under an assumed name. There's little danger or conflict here (Maria's pet rat is poisoned; a sullen housekeeper accuses her of petty theft but is quickly unmasked as the real culprit); still, readers will get a taste of bustling, cosmopolitan 17th-century Amsterdam and share Maria's joy at being reunited with her parents and, later, learning that Isobel is safe in distant New Amsterdam. A mild but pleasant historical novel, replete with just deserts and happy endings. (Fiction. 10- 13)

Pub Date: April 4, 1994

ISBN: 0-8027-8281-7

Page Count: 208

Publisher: Walker

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 1, 1994

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THE PAPER COWBOY

A winningly authentic, realistic and heartwarming family drama.

A family crisis pushes a 12-year-old wannabe cowboy living outside Chicago in 1953 to resort to bullying and damaging pranks.

Since his baby sister’s birth, Tommy’s normally moody mother’s been like a “sky full of dark clouds.” When his older sister’s seriously burned, Tommy’s left to cope with her daily newspaper route, his increasingly abusive mother, his overwhelmed father and his younger sisters. Tommy reacts by bullying classmates, especially a shy, overweight new boy at school named Sam. When he’s caught stealing from Sam’s father’s store, Tommy retaliates by planting a copy of a communist newspaper found during a community paper drive in the store. After the owner’s accused of being a communist and the store’s boycotted, Tommy realizes he’s acting like an outlaw instead of a cowboy, and he tries to find the real communist in the neighborhood, leading to surprising discoveries and the help his family desperately needs. Speaking in the first person, Tommy reveals himself as a good-hearted, responsible kid who’s temporarily lost his moral compass. Effective use of cowboy imagery allows Tommy to step up like his hero, Gary Cooper in High Noon, and do the right thing. Period detail and historical references effectively capture the anti-communist paranoia of the McCarthy era.

A winningly authentic, realistic and heartwarming family drama. (author’s note, photos) (Historical fiction. 10-13)

Pub Date: Sept. 4, 2014

ISBN: 978-0-399-16328-9

Page Count: 352

Publisher: Putnam

Review Posted Online: July 28, 2014

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 15, 2014

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GOLD RUSH GIRL

A splendidly exciting and accessible historical adventure.

Tory encounters the independence and adventure she longs for in the untamed city of San Francisco in 1849.

Thirteen-year-old narrator Victoria Blaisdell, known to her family as Tory, lives a comfortably privileged life in mid-19th-century Providence, Rhode Island. She is frustrated and constrained by the influence of her maternal aunt, Lavinia, who believes that girls are to take care of boys and should be educated only at home. But when Tory’s father loses his position and wages and decides to seek gold in California, Tory stows away on the ship that will take him and her fretful younger brother, Jacob, on the seven-month journey to San Francisco. There, Tory finds work to keep herself and Jacob going while their father heads off to the gold fields. When Jacob is kidnapped to be a cabin boy for a ship heading out of the Golden Gate, Tory must appeal to her new friend Thad from Maine and to Sam, a wary young black man from Sag Harbor, New York, to help her navigate an underworld of gambling, rogues, and abandoned ships. Sam and Señor Rosales, who runs the cafe near Tory and Jacob’s tent, are the only nonwhite principal characters. Tory is the only girl. Avi evokes Gold Rush–era San Francisco through Tory’s eyes with empathy and clarity while keeping the action lively.

A splendidly exciting and accessible historical adventure. (Historical fiction. 10-13)

Pub Date: March 10, 2020

ISBN: 978-1-5362-0679-1

Page Count: 320

Publisher: Candlewick

Review Posted Online: Dec. 7, 2019

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 1, 2020

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