RedReviewStarGr 7 Up—Fourteen-year-old Joan Skraggs is forced to quit school, much to her dismay, in order to help out on Steeple Farms, where her father and three brothers work. Having lost her mother at an early age, Joan finds herself struggling to do all the chores for the men—cooking, cleaning, washing, and any other chore her father assigns her. Joan's only escape from the daily grind and drudgery of cleaning out privies and wringing out laundry is her love of books, which her teacher gave her when she left school. Joan longs for adventure and true love just like the heroine in her favorite book, Jane Eyre. She yearns for a life away from the farm, and because there is no one else to whom she can divulge her feelings, she pours out her heart into her diary. While the novel is told entirely in diary format, Rachel Botchan's excellent reading of Joan's emotions, dreams, and yearnings will keep readers captivated. The story of a young girl searching for and finally discovering a world away from the farm is not a unique one, but Botchan's narration elevates this portrayal of a vibrant, interesting, resourceful young lady who strives to take advantage of what the world has to offer in 1911. VERDICT Highly recommended. ["Coming-of-age drama and deeper questions of faith, belonging, and womanhood are balanced with just the right blend of humor": SLJ 8/15 starred review of the Candlewick book.]—Sheila Acosta, San Antonio
Schlitz's epistolary novel, set in 1911, follows fourteen-year-old Catholic farmgirl Joan -- thirsty for education and refinement -- as she runs away to Baltimore and is taken on as a "hired girl" in a wealthy, cultured Jewish household. Joan is bright but impetuous and absurdly romantic (blame Jane Eyre) -- and her coming of age includes many struggles of conscience, mortifying missteps, and painful corrections and revelations. Botchan's narration of Joan's diary entries is always sympathetic yet gives a clear sense of the teen's immaturity, naivete, ignorance of the world, and constantly fluctuating emotions and opinions. Botchan's characterizations are mostly subtle (with the exception of that of Mr. Rosenbach, which in the early tracks verges on stereotype); she conveys the book's considerable humor and pathos without exaggerating them. An excellent way for teen listeners to experience the winner of the 2015 Scott O'Dell Award for Historical Fiction. martha v. parravano

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