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Currents

di Jane Smolik

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234988,801 (3.25)Nessuno
Juvenile Fiction. Juvenile Literature. Historical Fiction. HTML:This middle-grade historical novel follows three young girls living very different lives who are connected by one bottle that makes two journeys across the ocean.
It's 1854 and eleven-year-old Bones is a slave on a Virginia plantation. When she finds her name in the slave-record book, she rips it out, rolls it up, and sets it free, corked inside a bottle alongside the carved peach pit heart her long-lost father made for her. Across the Atlantic on the Isle of Wight, motherless Lady Bess Kent and her sister discover Bones's bottle half-buried on the beach. Leaving Bones's name where it began and keeping the peach pit heart for herself, Bess hides her mother's pearl-encrusted cross necklace in the bottles so her scheming stepmother, Elsie, can't sell it off like she's done with other family heirlooms. When Harry, a local stonemason's son, takes the fall for Elsie's thefts, Bess works with her seafaring friend, Chap, to help him escape. She gives the bottle to Harry and tells him to sell the cross. Back across the Atlantic in Boston, Mary Margaret Casey and her father are at the docks when Mary Margaret spies something shiny. Her father fishes it out of the water, and they use the cross to pay for a much needed doctor's visit for Mary Margaret's ailing sister. As Bess did, Mary Margaret leaves Bones's name where it belongs. An epilogue returns briefly to each girl, completing the circle of the three unexpectedly interconnected lives.… (altro)
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Mostra 4 di 4
When done well, middle grade historical fiction both entertains and educates what can sometimes be a reluctant audience. Jane Smolik’s “Currents” earns high marks in the education category, but doesn’t rate as highly in the all-important entertainment category.

“Currents” links together the lives of three girls living in 1854. Bones is a slave on a Virginia plantation; Bess is a Lord’s daughter in England; and Mary Margaret is an Irish immigrant living in Boston. Although they never meet, their lives are connected through a message in a bottle, which originates from Bones.

Smolik presents readers with a well-researched and historically accurate account of mid 1800s life in each of these three communities. Readers learn not only about the main characters, but about the lives of background characters, and how things came to be (e.g. a concise history of the slave trade, the Irish potato famine, etc.)

The book falters a bit in its delivery. Each girl’s story could have benefitting from tighter editing, as I found they were each slow to start. I’m wondering if a younger reader would have the patience to stick with the book.

Overall 2.75 stars rounded up to 3.

Thank you to NetGalley and Charlesbridge for a galley of the book in exchange for an honest review
( )
  jj24 | May 27, 2024 |
A bottle crosses the ocean and connects the lives of three young girls in 1854; an enslaved girl in Virginia, an English girl, and an Irish immigrant in Boston. Source Notes.
  NCSS | Jul 23, 2021 |
Currents is the interconnected stories of three young women living in the 19th century. Bones is an enslaved person living on a Virginia Plantation just before the Civil War. Bess is the daughter of an English Duke, living on a tiny Island in England. Mary Margaret is an Irish Catholic immigrant in Boston. All three girls are strong and fight for justice. ( )
  klnbennett | Oct 7, 2020 |
eally enjoy reading middle-school historical fiction, especially one's that feature fierce girls fighting for their place in the world. Currents fits the bill and it brought to life three girls, one who is brutalized and two mistreated and dominated through unjust life circumstances. I am glad the author started with Bones, the slave girl who is whipped and abused for trying to learn to read and find her name in birth records. It was critical for Bones to know her name at a time when slave's names were changed as they were bought and sold. She wanted to have a place in the world for her and her family and by putting her first it allowed her name to be front and center. It also set up the rest of the book as we also learn the life stories of two other girls who also find a way to maintain their dignity through political oppression and harsh family circumstances. I felt for each girl and their pain and admired their fortitude.

While I was fairly immersed in most of the book, I think this book is for students who are already readers. At times it was a bit dry and moved slowly and I thought that it required an ability to "stick to it" to finish it.

Overall, often heartbreaking, often uplifting Currents is real and deeply told. Thank you to NetGalley for allowing me to review this book for an honest opinion. ( )
  Karen59 | Sep 24, 2015 |
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Juvenile Fiction. Juvenile Literature. Historical Fiction. HTML:This middle-grade historical novel follows three young girls living very different lives who are connected by one bottle that makes two journeys across the ocean.
It's 1854 and eleven-year-old Bones is a slave on a Virginia plantation. When she finds her name in the slave-record book, she rips it out, rolls it up, and sets it free, corked inside a bottle alongside the carved peach pit heart her long-lost father made for her. Across the Atlantic on the Isle of Wight, motherless Lady Bess Kent and her sister discover Bones's bottle half-buried on the beach. Leaving Bones's name where it began and keeping the peach pit heart for herself, Bess hides her mother's pearl-encrusted cross necklace in the bottles so her scheming stepmother, Elsie, can't sell it off like she's done with other family heirlooms. When Harry, a local stonemason's son, takes the fall for Elsie's thefts, Bess works with her seafaring friend, Chap, to help him escape. She gives the bottle to Harry and tells him to sell the cross. Back across the Atlantic in Boston, Mary Margaret Casey and her father are at the docks when Mary Margaret spies something shiny. Her father fishes it out of the water, and they use the cross to pay for a much needed doctor's visit for Mary Margaret's ailing sister. As Bess did, Mary Margaret leaves Bones's name where it belongs. An epilogue returns briefly to each girl, completing the circle of the three unexpectedly interconnected lives.

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