Showing posts with label Series: The Orphans' Journey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Series: The Orphans' Journey. Show all posts

Friday, June 9, 2023

"Prairie Homestead" by Arleta Richardson

About this book:

  “Since their mama died and their pa left, Ethan, Alice, Simon, and Will Cooper have not known much of a home. But now that the orphan train has taken them to Mr. and Mrs. Rush in Nebraska, their dreams of home may become a reality.
   The kids discover that life on a farm is full of challenges. Ethan learns how to drive a plow, watch for snakes, and deal with bullies at the country school. Alice learns to slop the hogs and live with a big sister who isn’t exactly welcoming. Will seems to be the only one of the four that their new mother likes. And Simon disappears—again.”


Series: Book #3 in “The Orphans’ Journey” series. Review of Book #1 Here! and Book #2 Here!


Spiritual Content- A couple of Scriptures are mentioned & quoted; Prayers & Thanking God; Talks about God, His reasons for things that happen, & a couple discusses their spiritual welfare; 'H's are capital when referring to God; It’s said the one of the hired hands on the ranch doesn’t depend much on prayer and another tells him that he doesn’t have any guarantees on how long he’ll live (so he should get seriously about God; he tells the other man to keep praying for him and he’ll be safe; The man was upset that their prayers didn’t help heal a child, but prays for another child who is possibly in trouble); The new mother realizes that she wants to get closer to God to be able to depend on Him more & discusses it with her husband; Mentions of God, trusting Him, & faiths; Mentions of prayers, praying, & blessings over food; Mentions of churches, church going, services, hymns, preachers, & Sunday school lessons; Mentions of Christians & Christian duties (one man says that another man may be religious, but he doesn’t see eye to eye with him on the Christian part as he thinks that being a Christian should improve your disposition and hasn’t for the other man); Mentions of a Christian children’s home; Mentions of a Christmas celebration & the first Christmas; A few mentions of those & events in the Bible; A mention of missionaries.
 

Negative Content- Minor cussing including: a ‘dumb’; Some of the adults roll their eyes, use sarcasm, & bicker/snap at each other; Mentions of deaths, a child falling through a frozen pond and dying from pneumonia, & grief (for a son); Mentions of someone being bitten by a rattlesnake, the near death, the injury, & the dead snake (up to semi-detailed); Mentions of a thief, stealing, & stolen money; Mentions of switches/strappings & Ethan being strapped by his new father (including Ethan being upset at the thought of his younger siblings being hit and another adult saying that the new mother won’t let the father touch them); Mentions of a father strapping his son & the son having welts and bruises frequently (including a mention of the father trying to break his son and the son now being a father and trying to do the same to his son (according to someone else)); Mentions of a bully & his mean comments towards the children who came from the Orphan Train; A few mentions of someone possibly dying on a trip (a mother’s concern); A few mentions of hunting; A couple mentions of Ethan wondering if an Indian will kill or scalp him; A couple mentions of Ethan’s biological father leaving his family; A couple mentions of jealousy; A couple mentions of a saloon; A mention of a possible kidnapping; A mention of possible fires; 
             *Note: In the Cooper kids’ new family, there is a daughter who was adopted with another little boy, but when the boy passed away, she’s been after her parents to get “another boy to replace [him]”; Some others tell the family to send back the children if they can’t handle it; There are quite a few prejudice comments about orphans (including someone not wanting to believe a boy is innocent from a crime); Ethan is asked why he and Alice do not call their new parents mom and dad and he says “I kinda feel like they aren’t really being our parents. They’re just keeping us.” (towards the beginning); There’s some sibling bickering and one of the boys comments that “it’s no use trying to tell a girl anything”; A few comments from the hired help for a family complaining about a family adopting (because it will be more work for them); A few mentions of some Indians not liking white folks because of the government pushing them onto the reservations; A mention of the children becoming as “brown as the Indians” due to them playing in the sun.
 
 
Sexual Content- Frances is disappointed to find out a young man is already spoken for, but realizes that she was “dreaming to think he would pay special attention to her”; A mention of a teenage girl blushing over an older young man; A mention of a woman remembering of when her daydreams placed her in a “man’s favor”.
 
-Ethan Cooper, age 9
                             P.O.V. switches between many different characters
                                         Set in 1908
                                                        192 pages


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Pre Teens- 

New Teens- 

Early High School Teens- 

Older High School Teens- 

My personal Rating- 

{Could possibly be triggering for adoptees}

I was actually incredibly nervous going into this book because the prior book didn’t set up their new family as the best with comments about the dad being stoic, the mom being flighty, and the daughter being spoiled and bratty (paraphrasing here, but that’s what I recall gathering about them). Thankfully they weren’t too bad, in reality, and there’s character development for the parents. Though my heart wished it had been more of a sweet welcoming for the kids with everything they’ve been through.  

 

 

See y’all on Monday with a new review! 




*BFCG may (Read the review to see) recommend this book by this author. It does not mean I recommend all the books by this author.

Friday, April 21, 2023

"Whistle-Stop West" by Arleta Richardson

About this book:

  “Nine-year-old Ethan Cooper has managed to keep his family together for a year in a Pennsylvania orphanage. Now he and his siblings are boarding a train headed west. He can’t help but worry: Mr. and Mrs. Rush in Nebraska have agreed to adopt all four Cooper children, but what if they change their minds?
   In the meantime, Ethan and his siblings encounter their first dust storm, explore train cars, and watch friend after friend leave with new parents. The children dream that soon they will have a new ma and pa too.
   Based on the story of a real family, this second book in the historical Beyond the Orphan Train series reminds us that God never leaves us, no matter how far we journey to find home.”


Series: Book #2 in “The Orphans’ Journey” series. Review of Book #1 Here!


Spiritual Content- Proverbs 20:7 at the beginning; Scriptures are read, quoted, ; Prayers & Blessings over food; Retelling about events from the Bible; Going to church (once); Talks about God; 'H's are capital when referring to God; A child says that he doesn’t know Jesus (which the Matron says that they want him to know about Jesus and tells him about Him); Mentions of God, Jesus, & trusting Him; Mentions of Bibles & Bible reading; Mentions of those & events in the Bible; Mentions of prayers, praying, thanking God, & blessings over food; Mentions of churches, church going, services, pastors, sermons, hymns, & Sunday school; Mentions of Christians & a Christian duties; Mentions of a Christian children’s home; A few mentions of a mission society & missions; A couple mentions of spreading the Gospel; A mention of Heaven; A mention of being Blessed; A mention of a man doing “what he thinks the Bible tells him to” (about child rearing and teaching them to obey); 
             *Note: A mention of someone saying a couple doesn’t have children because of the Lord’s blessing as they don’t have a heart between them.
 

Negative Content- A bit of eye rolling & children bickering; Mentions of deaths, a child falling through a frozen pond, & grief (for a son, all up to semi-detailed); Mentions of a mortician & taking care of the bodies (barely-above-not-detailed); A few mentions of a family dying in a fire (barely-above-not-detailed); Mentions of (adopted) children being punished (by a new father, because that’s how he was raised (obedience and not sparing the rod being mentioned and someone else saying the new father will make a strong-minded boy feel low); Mentions of gossip & rumors; A couple mentions of smallpox & deaths (a man’s wife and son); A couple mentions of kidnapping; A couple mentions of stealing; A couple mentions of jail & arrests; A mention of a tavern; 
             *Note: There are many prejudice comments about orphans (quite a few mentions of people sending the kids back if it doesn’t work out, replacing a child who has passed away, having them as unpaid servants, called “street kids” and thinking they may have diseases, some saying about not knowing where the kids come from or not wanting to let them into their homes; some of the comments or attitudes are corrected by others); A few comments from the hired help for a family complaining about the daughter of the family (calling her good-for-nothing and not wanting the family to adopt because it will be more work for them); Mentions of some children living on the streets & eating food from the trash or stealing it; Mentions of a wife complaining a lot (& her husband spending a lot of time out in the field because of it); A couple mentions of fighting Indians; A mention of a woman saying that her adopted daughter is “not very pretty” and hopes that she’ll grow out of it.
 
 
Sexual Content- N/A.
 
-Ethan Cooper
                                P.O.V. switches between many different characters
                                           Set in 1908 
                                                      192 pages


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Pre Teens- 

New Teens- 

Early High School Teens- 

Older High School Teens- 

My personal Rating- 

{Could possibly be triggering for adoptees}

I do think this particular book could possibly be trigger or a hard read for adoptees due to all the prejudice comments made from people in different towns the orphan train is coming to. I would say it was about 60/40 on what was said about the children (negative vs kind/compassionate). While it’s easy to note based on the writing that the person is in the wrong (such as their words or actions with their comments being rude or hoity-toity), not all of those comments or thoughts are corrected. Unfortunately, it’s part of history—no matter if it’s hard, uncomfortable, or just plain wrong, it’s something orphans heard during this time (and sometimes nowadays still) and were treated as less than others or as servants. It definitely makes you compare the difference from then to now in how adoptions happen. 

Because we are many different points of view, including the family that’s supposed to adopt the Cooper kids, there were cute moments and then moments that I felt a bit stressed! Especially towards the ending, and I’ll admit that it didn’t end how I was hoping, but hopefully the next book will make up for that. My jury’s out on the new family.

This series has been cute so far and I’m looking forward to continuing it, though, I am concerned about the new family.

 

 

See y’all on Friday with a new review! 




*BFCG may (Read the review to see) recommend this book by this author. It does not mean I recommend all the books by this author.

Monday, March 13, 2023

"Looking for Home" by Arleta Richardson

About this book:

  “With his mother dead, his father gone, and his older brothers and sisters unable to help, eight-year-old Ethan Cooper knows it’s his responsibility to keep him and his younger siblings together—even if that means going to an orphanage.
    Ethan, Alice, Simon, and Will settle into the Briarlane Christian Children’s Home, where there’s plenty to eat, plenty of work, and plenty of talk about a Father who never leaves. Even so, Ethan fears losing the only family he has. How can he trust God to keep him safe when almost everything he’s known has disappeared?
    The first book in the Beyond the Orphan Train series, Looking for Home takes us back to 1907 Pennsylvania and into the real-life adventures of four children in search of a true home.”


Series: Book #1 in “The Orphans’ Journey” series. 


Spiritual Content- Scriptures are quoted & remembered; Prayers & Blessings over food; Church going; Being told the story of The Good Shepard; Discussions about God, praying, & the Good Shepard; Talks about God, Jesus, Him being the Good Shepard, Him caring for us, praying, & Heaven; 'H's are capital when referring to God; Many mentions of God, Jesus, praying, & the Good Shepard; Mentions of Bibles & Bible reading; Mentions of prayers, praying, thanking God, & blessings over food; Mentions of churches/chapels, church going, services, deacons/ministers, & Sunday school (including a mention of Ethan’s father not allowing him to go to Sunday School because he didn’t want handouts & a grown woman wanting to attend a different church because “no one in her social set would dream of worshipping in a place like [the church they attend]”); Mentions of a Christian Children’s Home; A couple mentions of religious charitable work.
 

Negative Content- Minor cussing including: a ‘botheration’, a ‘what in tarnation’, & three ‘tarnation!’s; Ethan’s mother passed away before the start of the book and his father works on a boat, so Ethan and three of his younger siblings go to a Children’s Home; Some grief (from Ethan about his mother); A child is kidnapped (not with ill-intent, but the child is scared); A woman wants a child (for the wrong/selfish reasons, to enhance her standing in the town, which she reflects on later); Ethan is threatened by a bully (who never actually apologizes later but tries to make things better); Ethan and a friend try to wiggle out of a future punishment by not listening to instructions; Ethan hits another boy (a young man and it doesn’t hurt him); Ethan keeps the bully’s threats to himself because he’s scare of retaliation (though, he eventually tells an adult); Mentions of a kidnapping & the kidnapper (who has to learn a lesson through this); Mentions of stealing & stolen items; Mentions of a bully & him threatening the younger kids (including Ethan); Mentions of when Ethan’s father would make him get beer for him & being strapped when late; Mentions of one of the kids from the Children’s Home running away (a teenager); A couple mentions of whips/being strapped (they don’t do that at the Children’s Home); A couple mentions of other children in town teasing and taunting the children from the Home; A mention of jail; A mention of a lie; 
             *Note: Towards the end of the book, an Orphan Train is planned for some of the children from the Children’s Home and in the author’s note, it’s mentioned about those who benefited or suffered under those arrangements. 
 
 
Sexual Content- N/A. 
 
-Ethan Cooper, ages 8-9
                                P.O.V. switches between Ethan & others 
                                        Set in 1907-1908
                                                 184 pages


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Pre Teens- 

New Teens- 

Early High School Teens- 

Older High School Teens- 

My personal Rating- 

{Could possibly be triggering for adoptees}

This book has been on my radar for years and I’m glad I finally got around to reading it. Like other good middle-grade stories, there’s a lot of character development for different characters within this 200 pages and some adventures too! There was a good amount of faith content and overall quite clean. It could be triggering for adoptees, though, as Ethan and his eight siblings are split-up and some are in the Children’s Home. They are well taken care of there, but there are a few challenges in the adjustment period. *Spoiler* At the end, one of Ethan’s older siblings give approval for the younger four (including Ethan) to be sent on an orphan train to be adopted as their father will not be coming back. *End of Spoiler*
I’m looking forward to continuing with the series and see what happens for this sibling group. 

 

 

See y’all on Friday with a new review! 




*BFCG may (Read the review to see) recommend this book by this author. It does not mean I recommend all the books by this author.