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Snakes and Stones

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Twelve-year-old Chestnut Hill's daddy stole her and the triplets away from their mama. At least, that's how Chestnut remembers it.
It's 1921, and after nearly two years on the road with his traveling elixir show, Daddy's still making no move to go back to Kentucky and buy Mama that house. So Chestnut is forced to come up with her own plan to get home. At night, when Daddy and the triplets are in bed, she draws up flyers with the name of the next town they'll be traveling to. Before they leave each town and hoping her mama will see them, she nails up the flyers, leaving Mama an easy trail straight to her children.
When that doesn't work, Chestnut is forced to try something bigger. But when her newest plan lands Daddy in jail and Mama has to come to the rescue, Chestnut discovers that things are not always as they seem. Written with a wonderful mountain hillbilly voice, Snakes and Stones has a mystery at its heart and lovable, strong, and complicated characters.

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  • Reviews

    • Kirkus

      September 15, 2016
      A Southern girl learns a troubling truth about her past.It's 1921. For two years white 12-year-old Chestnut Hill, along with her 7-year-old triplet siblings, has been living and traveling through the South in a repurposed circus wagon with their snake-oil-salesman father. Resentful, hardened Chestnut just knows Daddy kidnapped her and the triplets and that Mama is frantic. Chestnut draws and mounts posters for the traveling shows that feature the names of towns the family will be visiting next, thus creating a paper trail she hopes Mama will follow. Along the way, the Hills meet up with Daddy's old "Negro" friend Abraham, who joins them on their travels. He explains that Daddy's a much better man than Chestnut ever believed--and, tantalizingly, seems to know exactly why Daddy took off with the children; he's just not telling. Chestnut narrates, giving her story immediacy; her and other characters' speech are rife with colorful regionalisms and overloaded with similes that may try readers' patience. Chestnut's a well-realized, realistically conflicted character, but readers may tire of her unrelenting belief in her father's villainy and hold on the kidnapping scenario. More troubling are Abraham's highly stereotyped speech patterns and a pandering characterization. While racism typical of the time and place are acknowledged, it's unrealistic that prejudice touches these itinerants comparatively little. Other lapses in logic intrude as well. Atmospheric and ultimately heartwarming but cliched. (Historical fiction. 9-12)

      COPYRIGHT(2016) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • School Library Journal

      November 1, 2016

      Gr 4-7-Life for 12-year-old Chestnut Hill seems to be held together by lies and deceptions. She has no idea why her daddy stole her away from her loving mother, taking her and her triplet siblings on the road in a traveling elixir show. Now Chestnut is forced to move from town to town in a ramshackle wagon, taking care of the rambunctious youngsters, helping her daddy with his act, and always drifting farther from her home. She longs to be reunited with her mother, so she uses her artistic talent to leave a trail of signs, hoping that her mother will see them and know where Chestnut and the family are headed. When that plan doesn't work, Chestnut makes a bold choice, a risky and dishonest move that turns the family upside down and forces her mother to rescue them. Chestnut comes to realize that sometimes lies are just a way to protect the innocent, that sometimes they are very dangerous, and that while it is easy to learn to lie, undoing the wrong that deceptions create can seem almost impossible. Readers will be instantly drawn into Fowler's tale by strong, likable characters who speak in a mountain dialect; the fascinating historical setting; the humor; and the mystery. VERDICT An engaging offering about the morality of dishonesty and the value of truthfulness, with a charming setting. A solid purchase for collections looking to expand the variety of their historical fiction.-MaryAnn Karre, Binghamton, NY

      Copyright 2016 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      October 15, 2016
      Grades 3-6 It's 1921, and Chestnut Hill has been traveling with her father and her younger triplet siblingsHazel, Mac, and Filbertsince the day he took them away from their mother. Together, the siblings help sell their father's snake oil elixir, but Chestnut is tired of having to lie to people every day about its powers. While traveling, Chestnut leaves handmade signs behind showing their next destination, in the hope that her mother will track them down. When she finally can't take it anymore, Chestnut steals money to buy a ticket home, which leads to a series of troubles that result in a reunion with her mother. But when she witnesses an argument between her parents, she learns a heartbreaking truth about them. Fowler includes some period-appropriate instances of racism, including some targeting the Hills' friend, Abraham, although the Hills are not depicted as racist themselves. Chestnut's first-person narrative, in an old-fashioned, rural dialect, might be a struggle for some, but the fast pace and intriguing secrets in this debut will keep the pages turning.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2016, American Library Association.)

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Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:5.2
  • Interest Level:4-8(MG)
  • Text Difficulty:4

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