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Gold rush girl  Cover Image Book Book

Gold rush girl

Avi 1937- (author.).

Record details

  • ISBN: 1536206792 :
  • ISBN: 9781536206791 :
  • Physical Description: 306 pages : illustration ; 22 cm
    print
  • Edition: First edition.
  • Publisher: Somerville, Massachusetts : Candlewick Press, 2020.
Subject: California Gold discoveries Fiction
Frontier and pioneer life California Fiction
California History 1846-1850 Fiction
Brothers and sisters Fiction
Kidnapping Fiction
Adventure and adventurers Fiction

Available copies

  • 2 of 2 copies available at Town of Hanover Libraries.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 2 total copies.

Holds

0 current holds with 2 total copies.

Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Status Due Date
Etna Library J AVI 31257000283571 Etna childrens Available -
Howe Library J AVI 31254003665524 Children's chapter books Available -

Syndetic Solutions - Excerpt for ISBN Number 9781536206791
Gold Rush Girl
Gold Rush Girl
by Avi
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Excerpt

Gold Rush Girl

Have you ever been struck by lightning? I have. I write not of the sparkling that bolts from the sky, but of gold, the yellow metal buried in the earth and the shatter -- wit world of those who seek it. That world turned me topsy -- turvy, so that I did things I never dreamed I would or could do. It began, fittingly, in a leap year: 1848. I was thirteen years old. My family -- ​Father (Randolph Blaisdell); Mother (Abigail Pell Blaisdell); my younger brother, Jacob; and I, Victoria, most often called Tory -- ​was residing in the smallest state in these United States: Rhode Island. We had a home in Providence, the state's major city, with its fine buildings, wealth, tranquility, and a population of forty thousand. Our home was 15 Sheldon Street, a modest but agreeable wooden house on the east side of town. It stood upon "The Hill," as it was smartly called, above commercial Wickenden Street. We had a cook and one servant, both of whom lived in our attic. Our lives were comfortable, with nothing unusual ever happening. Indeed, my early family life was untroubled, as smooth as Chinese silk. I questioned nothing, not about the world or about myself. My entire universe was Sheldon Street, which meant I knew everyone as they knew me. As for my social life, it consisted of calling and receiving among a small group of proper neighbor­hood girls. As one grows up, it can take a while to understand that sometimes it is not your mother or father who have the greatest influence on your life. Thus it was but gradually that I came to realize that the person who shaped my life more than any other was my mother's older sister, Aunt Lavinia. Since the two sisters were from the distinguished Rhode Island Pell family, Lavinia already considered herself quite the queen. Then, before I was born, she married Quincy Fellows, a wealthy Pawtucket cloth-factory owner. That made her -- ​in her mind -- ​an empress . A tall, big woman, with hanging coils of braid alongside her puffy face, which peered out from a deep, dark bonnet, she wore long, wide gowns with bulging sleeves, a shape that made me think of her as a walking mountain, and a volcano at that. Indeed, she constantly erupted with lava-­like judgments, advice, and instructions as to how my family should live our lives. All of which is to say, while my mother and father raised me, their words were almost always prefaced by "As your aunt Lavinia suggests . . ." One of Aunt Lavinia's judgments -- ​which I was shocked to discover -- ​was that my mother had lowered her station in life by marrying my father. Father was a man of middle age and modest height. Quite portly, he had a round, smooth, shaved face and fair hair brushed with care. His soft pink hands -- ​somewhat ink stained -- ​were what you would expect of someone who wielded pen, not pickax. At home or at work, he attired himself in common gentleman's fashion -- ​English frock coat, vest, knotted neck cloth, tan pants, and tall black silk hat. He worked as an accountant for Pratt and Willinghast, a respectable trading business, which had its offices on Peck Street in the middle of Providence. Significantly, it was a position secured for him by Aunt Lavinia's husband, a fact which she did not let Father (or Mother) forget. Still, after ten years of service, Father received a silver pocket watch in recognition of his good work. He liked to bring it out at regular intervals so as to suggest that he was a busy man. In fact, I came to understand it was displayed mostly to show Aunt Lavinia that he was worthy. But then, as I came to realize, Father's highest ambition was to become acceptable to Aunt Lavinia, and he chose to do so by agreeing to all her advice and judgments. As for my mother, she had a kind­hearted, loving nature and looked after us all, trying her best to shield us from her sister's dictates. By way of personal occupation, other than supervising her children's upbringing and managing the household, she had her reading (popular romances such as The Betrothed ) and needlework to do. Yet while Mother was a quiet soul, sometimes, when I watched her sewing, it seemed as if she were frustrated with her life and used her needle to pierce the fabric of her world. Exasperated by my parents' constant deference to Aunt Lavinia, it was upon my younger brother, Jacob, that I bestowed my deepest affections. More than anyone else, he was willing to listen to my endless prattle. Most of all, he didn't criticize me. We were as close as kin can be, and I enjoyed his company greatly. Jacob -- ​four years younger than I -- ​had a pleasing, apple­cheeked sweetness. An earnest, serious, almost solemn boy, he was not given to mischief. When he played with his school friends, he did so quietly, without much zest. He was fond of music and enjoyed whistling the popular songs of the day. That said, his whistling told me that he was troubled. Whereas Jacob considered me hot-brained, he fretted far too much, and worry made him agitated. Jacob appeared to be the least bothered by how much our lives were governed by my aunt. But then it was Jacob of whom Aunt Lavinia most approved. She, who had no children of her own, once said, "Jacob is a perfect child. He is quiet and does what he is told. We should all encourage Victoria to be more like her brother." Once she informed me, "You should know, Victoria, that someday Jacob will be the head of the family and you will need to defer to him." Young though I was, I was much distressed and replied, "Jacob shall have his life. I shall have mine." Excerpted from Gold Rush Girl by Avi All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.

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