Hear the Wind Blow
- Authors
- Hahn, Mary Downing
- Publisher
- Clarion Books
- Tags
- history , fiction , historical , juvenile fiction , general , family , united states , brothers and sisters , siblings , shenandoah river valley (va. and w. va.) - history - civil war; 1861-1865 , survival , military & wars , shenandoah river valley (va. and w. va.) , united states - history - civil war; 1861-1865 , 19th century , death; grief; bereavement , civil war period (1850-1877) , family & relationships
- ISBN
- 9780618181902
- Date
- 2003-05-19T06:00:00+00:00
- Size
- 0.18 MB
- Lang
- en
From School Library JournalGrade 5-8-Through the eyes of Haswell Colby Magruder, readers see and experience the horrors of the Civil War. Set in Shenandoah, VA, the story opens as the 13-year-old agrees to hide a wounded Confederate soldier. The Yankees' discovery of the young man on the Magruder farm and their subsequent retaliation starts a sequence of events that culminates with Haswell's escape with his seven-year-old sister, and his later solo journey in search of his older brother, who is fighting in the war. Although the main characters are from the South, Hahn succeeds in writing about the horrors of war without really taking sides. War is the villain here, and people from both sides are its victims. This is a wonderfully written story peopled by believable, three-dimensional characters who exhibit fear, courage, love, hate, compassion, prejudice, and understanding. The drama of the Civil War and the fine storytelling and characterization hook readers from the outset. As in Promises to the Dead (Clarion, 2000), Hahn deals here with the exercise of compassion in the face of danger. This selection is an excellent choice to add to other historical fiction on the Civil War such as Gary Paulsen's Soldier's Heart (Delacorte, 1998) and Ann Rinaldi's Amelia's War (Scholastic, 1999).Renee Steinberg, Fieldstone Middle School, Montvale, NJCopyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From BooklistGr. 6-9. Like Hahn's Stepping on the Cracks (1991), this stirring novel tells a war story through the eyes of a young person. It's the end of the Civil War in Northern Virginia, and 13-year-old Haswell Magruder suddenly finds himself the head of his family. After Haswell hides a wounded Confederate soldier, the Yankees attack Haswell's mother and destroy the farm. The boy and his younger sister escape. Haswell leaves his sister with relatives in town and rides across the war-torn countryside in search of his wounded older brother. Hahn brings readers up close to the slaughter on both sides, presenting a picture of ordinary men who are not at all sure why they are fighting. It's odd that slavery is barely mentioned despite the huge cast. The action is fast and furious, and kids will be caught up in the story of soldiers and civilians and the horror of "simply following orders." Hazel RochmanCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved