Showing posts with label historical fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label historical fiction. Show all posts

Sunday, October 26, 2008

Stranded with a Good Book

Have you ever been stuck at the airport waiting for the weather to clear so that your flight can take off? That was the situation I was in recently, and thank goodness I had a good book to keep my mind off of the wait. In fact, the book I was reading transported me to India rather than Chicago which was my desired destination.

Kashmira Sheth, the author of Keeping Corner, tells the story of Leela, a widow at the age of twelve. In fact, Leela was engaged at age two, married at age ten and just before her anu ceremony, her husband was bitten by a poisonous snake. When Leela's husband died, she was looked upon as bad luck. She needed to spend a year keeping corner, which was an Indian tradition. During this year, Leela could not go out of the house, had to wear drab clothing and keep her head shaved. According to Indian tradition, Leela was to not marry again.

Can you imagine what life was like for Leela? Although things looked grim, Leela's brother fought for her right to an education and this opened new doors for her. This break with tradition occurred as Ghandi was encouraging the Indian people to break with tradition and fight against English oppression.

I learned quite a bit about Indian traditions and history while I waited for the flight departure to be announced. What good books have helped you through a long wait?

Wednesday, May 14, 2008

Making a History Connection



Blood on the River: James Town 1607 by Elisa Carbone

Here is a novel that will bring all that you have learned in history class to life! Elisa Carbone tells the story of how Jamestown came to be through the eyes of Samuel Collier, an 11-year-old orphan. Samuel is sent to the New World as a page to Captain John Smith.

Life was not easy for these new settlers. Battles with some nearby Native American tribes, befriending the Powhatan Indians, and learning their ways in order to not offend them, kept the Jamestown people busy. Winter nearly killed them.

Carbone shares her sources at the end of this novel. Her attention to providing historically accurate details makes this a book worth choosing!