Orphan Train by Christina Baker Kline
This is a beautifully written story about the unlikely friendship and bond that develops between Vivian, an elderly woman, and Molly, a troubled teenage girl. Despite their 74-year age difference, they come to find they share tragic childhood experiences that, until now, no one else in their respective lives have been able to relate to.
During the years between 1854 and 1929, more than 200,000 orphaned, abandoned and homeless children from the East Coast were transported by train to the farmlands of the Midwest. These so-called orphans were then 'adopted' by Midwest families. Babies and healthy older boys were chosen first -- as the boys were wanted for field work -- and older girls were generally chosen last. Some children were fortunate to be adopted by kind, loving families, but most began an indentured life of hard labor and servitude.
The author cleverly weaves a relatively unknown part of American history with the present-day struggles of a teen in the foster care system. The result is an impactful tale of hope, resilience and strength as the two main characters help each other to solve unanswered questions that have troubled both their lives.
Our book club members were unfamiliar with Orphan Trains and did not know about this time in our history. Pleasantly, the book prompted many of us to conduct our own research to learn more about the real Orphan Train riders. We agreed this was an enjoyable and realistic book with vividly depicted characters we felt sympathetic to. The situational descriptions were believable and we found the events, jumping between different narrators in past then present and back again, were surprisingly easy to follow. The events were sad, at times tragic, but in the end uplifting and hopeful.
This is a story that left us thinking about the lost children of history and the lost children of today. We strongly recommend this well-researched book, and promise it will be a novel that will stay with you long after you finish reading the last page.
We met at Spicy Talk Bistro in Redmond, an exceptional Szechuan restaurant that was new to most of us. Although the service was a bit to be desired, we all agreed the food was excellent and well worth the visit. In particular, the hand-shaved noodles and green onion pancake were amazing will ensure our return.
By Mari Colbourne
Thursday, March 27, 2014
Friday, March 14, 2014
The Kitchen House
The Kitchen House
Celtic Bayou
We meet another young orphan this month in The Kitchen House by Kathleen Grissom. When seven-year old Lavinia’s parents die during passage to America years before the Civil War, she becomes indentured to the owner of a Virginia tobacco plantation. Though she is white, the plantation’s black slaves take her in, nurse her to health physically and emotionally, and in return, she finds a loving home with them – at least for a while. She grows up as a slave, but when she’s a teenager, she’s forced to leave her adopted family and pursue an education in another city. She finds that she can no longer straddle the two worlds of black slavery and white freedom, and eventually marries the plantation owner’s son, a flawed character with a tragic history of his own.
The story is told in the alternating viewpoints of Lavinia and Belle, a slave in the kitchen house and the plantation owner’s illegitimate daughter. Through these two narrations, the many characters and their complicated relationships come to life.
The club members agreed that the story was a captivating and emotional one. The story twist of a white indentured servant living with black slaves created a complex dynamic that kept some of us turning pages into the night. For others, the story was good but maybe not the most riveting that we’ve read. We agreed that after working out way throughRoots, we felt like we had some depth to our understanding of life in antebellum Virginia.
In keeping with our southern theme and adding a dash of Irish fare, our restaurant was the Celtic Bayou, a pub in Redmond whose menu includes fare such as bangers and mash, jambalaya, and red beans and rice. The casual atmosphere was perfect for a lengthy discussion, not all of it about the book, as usual. Sunday night wasn’t very busy, so our server gave us plenty of time for discussion while we enjoyed blackened catfish and hush puppies, cilantro-lime shrimp salad and Guiness. We also happened to catch snippets of the 2013 Academy Awards playing on the bar television. Since we’ve read, in the last year, The Secrets of Mary Bowser, Roots, and the Kitchen House, we decided we wanted to continue our education on the pre-Civil War South and see (and maybe read) this one of this year’s winners: 12 Years a Slave.
But, before that, we look forward to next month’s book: The Secret Daughter by Shilpi Somaya Gowda.
written by member Robin White
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)