The Eagle's Shadow

Martin, Nora

  • 3.82 out of 5 stars
    51 ratings by Goodreads
 
9780590360876: The Eagle's Shadow

Synopsis

Sent to live with her Tlingit Native American relatives in Alaska, twelve-year-old Clearie learns to embrace her mixed heritage and helps solve a crime.

"synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.

Reviews

Grade 5-7. Set in 1946 in a remote Alaskan village, this story chronicles the coming-of-age of a 12-year-old half-white, half-Tlingit girl who is sent to live with her native grandmother when her military father is posted overseas. Clearie comes to know herself and her heritage through her interactions with her relatives and with the community. At first feeling "frozen inside," she eventually opens her heart to her family and decides to learn the "old ways" of weaving, paddling, and fishing. The story unfolds rapidly with crisis after crisis as the villagers are forced to come to grips with problems of alcoholism and arson by standing up to the local whisky runner. Abandoned by her mother when she was five, Clearie now realizes that alcohol played a major role in her mother's behavior. Intertwined are a light romance between Clearie and a local boy, folktales, and great descriptions of life and wildlife in Southeast Alaska. The ending is rather pat but satisfying. Martin provides a glimpse of an earlier but not less complicated time. Jamie S. Bryson's The War Canoe (Alaska Northwest, 1990) tells of a troubled Tlingit teen who also finds self-awareness by learning about his heritage. Readers will find action, adventure, and a sense of place and family in this novel, despite its obvious lessons.?Mollie Bynum, formerly at Chester Valley Elementary School, Anchorage,
Copyright 1997 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From the first sentence of this unusual novel--``A year ago my world was water''--narrated by a half-Irish and half-Tlingit Indian 12-year-old, readers will be drawn to the poetic language, the promise of a compelling plot, and a hint of mystery. Set in the 1940s, the story opens as Clearie's cold and uncommunicative father sends her to Alaska to live for a time with relatives she's never met. Abandoned by her mother at age five, and accustomed to taking care of herself, Clearie quickly decides to remain as ice to a family member who has offended her, and hardly warmer to the rest, who seem to have plans to initiate her into the old Tlingit ways. Clearie acclimates herself and begins to function with those her age, but she also unintentionally becomes embroiled in a dangerous association with the most evil person in the tiny, isolated town. Readers sense danger developing before Clearie does, and also witness the budding romance between her and a town boy, which has its small and old-fashioned but significant joys. Through careful pacing and lyrical writing, Martin (The Stone Dancers, 1995, etc.) effortlessly develops many vital characters, but never neglects Clearie, who adapts, thrives, and finally takes great satisfaction in her ancestral identity. A suspenseful page-turner as well as a joyous exploration of a unique world in a remote setting. (Fiction. 10-14) -- Copyright ©1997, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.

Gr 6^-9. In August of 1946, 12-year-old Clearie's father sends her to live with her Tlingit relatives in Alaska while he is on duty in occupied Japan. Clearie's mother has disappeared, and her father is emotionally distant, but she takes to her solid and accepting grandmother, great-uncle, and aunt at once. It takes her longer to let herself thaw and see herself in their affection and remember and forgive her mother. The characterizations are not deep--all of the locals are wise and good, except for the town drunk, who sells hooch, sets fires, and threatens Clearie. Also, Clearie's understanding of herself and her mother's alcoholic past is a bit too easy in coming. The story is written with economy and grace, however, and fragments of Tlingit tales, the rhythms of the fish and the sea, the wool and the wood, are vivid and genuine. GraceAnne A. DeCandido

"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.

Other Popular Editions of the Same Title

9780439047784: The Eagle's Shadow

Featured Edition

ISBN 10:  0439047781 ISBN 13:  9780439047784
Publisher: Scholastic, 1999
Softcover