In 1800, Richard, a young city orphan, is sent to live with his uncle on a New York State farm, where he is forced to undertake difficult farmwork, cope with a cruel cousin, gain an education despite his uncle's disapproval, and free his uncle's two slaves.
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Richard has been raised by his aunt and her husband, a gentle Vermont storekeeper who values his musical and academic gifts. But when Aunt Ruth dies, Uncle Ambrose doesn't try to contest her brother Lyman's right to the 12-year-old, whom he claims as blood kin but covets as a laborer for his farm across the New York border. Lyman and his sons farm with the help of two slaves, ``Boy'' and his little daughter ``Gee Gee.'' Richard has known free blacks; slavery is illegal in Vermont in 1800--and not much countenanced in New York. But Lyman is a hard man, without imagination; he has sold Boy's wife Dina, uses him as a draft animal, and treats Richard with a similar lack of compassion. Still, despite Lyman's rigid proscriptions, the grueling labor, and a cousin who's ``a sneak with a nasty streak,'' the other cousin is kind, Richard's reading aloud is enjoyed by the household (including Gee Gee, whom he secretly teaches to read), and he's eventually given permission to attend school. In a taut conclusion, a sympathetic schoolmaster serves as deus ex machina: He locates Dina, now free in Canada, engineers the means for her family to join her, drives the escape wagon, and finds a place where Richard can earn his keep and continue his education. Possible, if neat; but also a satisfying outcome to a fast- moving, vividly authentic depiction of rural life and injustice in the country's early days. (Fiction. 10-14) -- Copyright ©1994, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
Grade 5-8-An American history lesson on the conflicting attitudes and laws concerning slavery in 1800 is woven into this story of hardship, determination, and courage. Compelled to live with the domineering Lyman Peck, both Richard, Lyman's 12-year-old orphaned nephew, and Gee Gee, a slave girl, dream of "breaking free." Lonely, bitter, and ill-suited for rough, outdoor work on the New York farm, Richard is chided and humiliated by his callous uncle and his cousin, Dan. The boy finds a friend in his older cousin, Zeke, who offers quiet understanding, and in Gee Gee, who wants to be reunited with her mother, whom Lyman sold. Richard rebels against his uncle's bigotry, ignorance, and insensitivity, and teaches Gee Gee to read. When his abolitionist teacher plots to reunite the girl with her parents, Richard joins her. Descriptions are vivid, dialogue is realistic, and events unfold smoothly. Although characters seem stereotypically good or bad and the boy's escape is a bit too convenient, readers will sympathize with the injustices in Richard's life and times.
Gerry Larson, Chewning Middle School, Durham, NC
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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