This month's book reviews
Adventures of a young boy who lived
in the Tower of London of the 1730's
Forrest
Harper was eleven years old and lived with his family inside
the walls of the prison fortress known as the Tower of London.
His father had the job of taking care of the ravens that lived
in the Tower and were kept there under the King's protection.
Forrest lived in a small cottage that he shared with his father,
mother, and younger sister. His whole life, however, was pretty
much spent inside the walls of the Tower. Once in a while,
his family would venture outside the walls, usually on days
that there was a public hanging or beheading.
Forrest took after his mother, who was short,
and not his father, who was a tall and imposing man and sometimes
responsible for guarding some of the prisoners locked up in
the tower. Forrest was kept busy all the time, helping his
father take care of the ravens, taking food to prisoners,
running errands for his mother, and performing various other
chores. Of course, being an imaginative boy, he thought he
was overworked. He often tried to imagine living outside the
Tower walls. He liked to play pirate or soldier when he had
a chance to pretend. His best friend was his pet raven that
he was trying to teach to talk.
Forrest didn't like to watch hangings or beheadings.
He felt sorry for the victims, but knew that he was supposed
to be glad when traitors were executed. So he was really bothered
when a pretty young Scottish girl from a family of rebel nobles
was brought to the Tower and put under his father's watch.
As he came to know her, he realized that she was not the evil
traitor that she was accused of being. He knew that she was
eventually going to be beheaded. He also knew that if he helped
her to escape and was discovered, he would be hanged and his
family disgraced. Would he dare to play any part in an escape
plan that a member of the girl's family was trying to put
into effect? Without Forrest's help, the plan would never
work.
Could an old house that dad wants to fix
up
really have ghosts in it?
There
are two girls in this story who have unusual powers. Charli
Bellard is cousin to the Crandalls, a family that includes
includes four-year-old twins, a two-year-old, and a sixteen
year-old brother. Their parents, Charli's aunt and uncle,
are very laid back people. Their house is always chaotic,
but they all enjoy life. The father, Uncle Will, has bought
the old run-down mansion in town and wants to fix it up and
make it a bed and breakfast. Charli's unusual power is an
ability to sense the presence of spirits or ghosts that other
do not see. She really doesn't want her uncle to buy the old
mansion.
Sophia is a fourteen-year-old orphan girl from
another town. When her elderly guardian is hospitalized, she
is sent to her nearest relatives - the Crandalls. Her strange
power is the ability to foresee events - especially bad things
- before they happen. Once she sees the old mansion, she has
really bad vibes about it. Unfortunately, she and Charli get
off to a bad start. At first, they don't like each other,
so they do not share their uneasy feelings about Uncle Will's
plans regarding the old mansion.
Charli is really disturbed when her Uncle Will
offers her a summer job helping to fix up the old mansion.
On her first time in the house, she senses the presence of
some kind of disturbed ghost or spirit. She is really alarmed
when one of the two-year-olds reports seeing a figure in the
old house that Charli knows could not be a real person.
It turns out that many years in the past the
mansion had been the scene of a murder. Could the ghost of
the murderer still be in the house? Could the ghost be a danger
to those entering the house, especially the little children?
Can Charli and Sophia combine their strange powers in a way
to keep anyone from possibly being killed by the ghostly presence
in the old mansion?
A story of the potato famine in Ireland
and the struggle to reach a new life
The
"Maggie" in "Maggie's Door" is a young woman who had already
reached America from her home in Ireland and was settled in
Brooklyn. This little book tells the story of Maggie's sister,
Nory, and her efforts to reach Brooklyn. Paralleling her efforts,
are those of Sean Red Mallon, a neighbor of the girls who
is trying to complete the same trip.
The reason these Irish immigrants to America
are leaving their beloved Ireland is because a terrible blight
had ruined the one crop that kept the poor people in Ireland
from starving - potatoes. The blight caused the food crop
to rot in the ground. At the time, nobody knew how to stop
the destruction. Every ship possible, including old, leaky,
unsafe vessels, was being pressed into service to transport
these unfortunate people to what they hoped would be a better
life in America.
Nory's story is that of the poorest passengers
traveling in the worst quarters to be found on the ship. Conditions
were horrible. People were crowded in leaky sections below
decks, ill to the point of many of them dying, and without
adequate food to eat. Sean's story is just a little different.
Since he seemed healthy and able to work, he was given a job
in the galley or cooking part of the ship. He was able to
get food, but he had to endure the cruel treatment form the
head cook, who was not beyond killing his helpers in his blind
rages.
As their tale is told, we are never sure whether
the two young Irish travelers are going to make it safely
to America or not. We can be sure, however, that their story
is similar to that of thousands of Irish immigrants who made
their ways to our country. Some of these young people may
be among our own ancestors.