Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Hetty Feather: A Victorian Foundling Girl



Yes, I am a sucker for Victorian era heroines and Hetty Feather is a fun new addition to my list of favorites. The writing is for the 8 to 12 age group but its setting is fascinating for all ages: a London foundling hospital in the 1880's. Hetty is left at the hospital as a baby and the story follows her to a foster family in the countryside and, when she reaches school age, back to the hospital. There she is expected to learn the skills she will need to go into service when she turns thirteen. But Hetty is a girl of action, with "a nature as fiery as her hair".  She has a wild imagination, a knack for storytelling and little desire to be a maid.  Punishments are harsh and affection is hard to come by at the hospital, and Hetty is determined to someday find her real mother.

Although the storytelling is generally light, the realities of the time are not ignored. Children die from disease and hunger, and when Hetty ventures outside the hospital, there are real dangers around every turn. The first-person narration allows our perspective to grow with Hetty, as she learns that life at the hospital may be lonely, but at least it offers her care and safety.

Dame Jacqueline Wilson is one of England's most noted children's authors and this is her first historical novel. Her inspiration for Hetty Feather came from her visits to the Foundling Museum, whose website offers a number of resources for students and teachers interested in learning more about the history of the Foundling Hospital.

Author: Wilson, Jacqueline
Publisher: Random House Children's Books
Publication Date: October 2009

Friday, January 8, 2010

The Evolution of Calpurnia Tate



The anthropologist in me can't help but be enthralled by a book whose first chapter involves an 11 year-old girl struggling to acquire a copy of Darwin's The Origin of Species. The year is 1899 and Mr. Darwin's book is not easy to come by in Fentress, Texas. But Calpurnia Virginia Tate is convinced it will help her sort out the mystery of the abundance of fat, yellow grasshoppers on her family's pecan farm. After being denied the book by the snooty town librarian, Callie Vee is forced to sort out the problem on her own and soon lands on a likely solution. She takes her discovery to her cantankerous Granddaddy who, impressed by her tenacity, offers her his prized copy of the book. And there begins a year of discovery that will change Callie Vee's relationship with nature, her grandfather and herself.  

The Evolution of Calpurnia Tate explores themes of transition, choice and, well, evolution. A new century is approaching and science is challenging long-held perceptions of nature and religion. Technology is rapidly changing daily life, from the town's first telephone to the mouth-dropping miracle of the "auto-mobile". And Callie's life is changing as well. As the only girl among six brothers, she has had a wild and wandering childhood. She much prefers studying nature and making notes in her journal to needlework and piano lessons. But Callie is growing up and her mother is determined she remedy her woeful lack of common domestic skills. Callie dreads every moment spent practicing knitting and cooking and secretly entertains the idea of attending the university to study science. Will her dream be too far-fetched to realize?

The episodic nature of the storytelling paints a vivid picture of family life in 1899, albeit a very privileged family. Reminders of civil war and slavery linger just outside of storyline but give depth to what can be the myopic view of a young protagonist. Callie's struggle for identity is both poignant and thought-provoking, but the quirky characters in her family and Callie's boisterous knack for getting into trouble keep the story light-hearted and entertaining.

This is Jacqueline Kelly's first novel.

Author: Kelly, Jacqueline
Publisher: Henry Holt & Company
Publication Date: May 2009