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by Stacey Lee

Summary

School Library Journal:

Gr 7 Up — Although Samantha and her father have a successful dry goods store in Saint Joseph, Missouri, they long to escape: Samantha yearns to return to New York in hopes of a music career, while her father dreams of moving west to California. After her father dies in a fire, the teen is left grief-stricken and vulnerable. Their landlord, Ty Yorkshire, offers her accommodation at the town hotel, where she befriends Annamae, a slave housekeeper. After Samantha kills Ty during a rape attempt, she and Annamae create disguises and join a caravan traveling to California in search of gold. While Annamae’s dialogue is written in a colloquial dialect, it doesn’t distract from the story. Samantha’s voice will sound contemporary to modern ears, yet not inaccurate to the mid-19th-century time period. The ever-present fear of being caught, whether by police or fellow travelers becoming wise to their disguises, is effectively created, as is the primitive life on the trail. As the girls learn cowboy techniques such as using dried buffalo scat to make a campfire and roping horses, readers are introduced to authentic cowboy life. Complications arise for Samantha when she develops a crush on a fellow cowboy; while Annamae falls for a vaquero (Mexican cowboy). This offers a much needed multicultural look at the Oregon Trail, with resourceful, smart, and brave Chinese  American and African American girls as main characters. High drama, tension, romantic longings, and touches of humor will entice historical fiction fans, and will be a perfect tie-in to social studies curriculum.—Jennifer Schultz, Fauquier County Public Library, Warrenton, VA –Jennifer Schultz (Reviewed December 1, 2014) (School Library Journal, vol 60, issue 12, p137)

Awards:

  • Amelia Bloomer Lists – Young Adult Fiction: 2016
  • YALSA Best Fiction for Young Adults: 2016

Topics

10th Grade, 11th Grade, 12th Grade, 7th Grade, 8th Grade, 9th Grade, Adult, Historical Fiction, Teen