


desertcart.com: Calico Captive: A Historical Fiction Story Based on a True Diary About War and Captivity in 1754 for Kids (Ages 10-12): 9780618150762: Speare, Elizabeth George: Books Review: A wonderful slice of history! - This is the fifth time I read this book. Once in college, once a year for three years with a group of fourth grade students and now 20 years later. What a wonderful story of growth as Miriam Willard learned the value of what matters most in life and her search to find it! Review: Coming of age historical fiction - Calico Captive is one of the lesser-known works by Newbury Medal award winner Elizabeth George Speare. One night in 1756 14-year-old Miriam Willard enjoys her family's party celebrating their return to their homestead outside of Fort Number Four in Charlestown New Hampshire. The next morning she and the family - older (and expecting) sister Susanna, brother-in-law, and their three young children - awaken to an Indian raid. Her family is marched through woods by Abenaki warriors, and eventually sold into slavery in Montreal just before the French-Indian War. The story is a little rough on the Indians, but it was also written in the 1950s. Still, these are not one-dimensional characters. The family is at first sold to the St. Francis Abenaki - a band in northwestern Vermont - and there she learns that the Indians are as human as she is, rather than simply violent pagans out for scalps. In this coming of age tale Miriam keeps learning new things about judgments she had made about others, and in the process grows up and finds herself. This middle-school historical fiction chapter book is amazingly accurate, as it should be since it was based on the true account written by Susannah in the early 1800s. A lot of fun, and made me think about the judgments society hands down to us, and why it is important to approach what happens to us with an open heart and mind.


| Best Sellers Rank | #63,630 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #15 in Teen & Young Adult United States Colonial & Revolutionary Period Historical Fiction #22 in Teen & Young Adult Military Historical Fiction #119 in Teen & Young Adult Fiction on Girls' & Women's Issues (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars (545) |
| Dimensions | 5.5 x 0.88 x 8.25 inches |
| Edition | Illustrated |
| Grade level | 5 - 7 |
| ISBN-10 | 0618150765 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-0618150762 |
| Item Weight | 12.8 ounces |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 288 pages |
| Publication date | October 29, 2001 |
| Publisher | Clarion Books |
| Reading age | 10 - 14 years |
H**Y
A wonderful slice of history!
This is the fifth time I read this book. Once in college, once a year for three years with a group of fourth grade students and now 20 years later. What a wonderful story of growth as Miriam Willard learned the value of what matters most in life and her search to find it!
F**K
Coming of age historical fiction
Calico Captive is one of the lesser-known works by Newbury Medal award winner Elizabeth George Speare. One night in 1756 14-year-old Miriam Willard enjoys her family's party celebrating their return to their homestead outside of Fort Number Four in Charlestown New Hampshire. The next morning she and the family - older (and expecting) sister Susanna, brother-in-law, and their three young children - awaken to an Indian raid. Her family is marched through woods by Abenaki warriors, and eventually sold into slavery in Montreal just before the French-Indian War. The story is a little rough on the Indians, but it was also written in the 1950s. Still, these are not one-dimensional characters. The family is at first sold to the St. Francis Abenaki - a band in northwestern Vermont - and there she learns that the Indians are as human as she is, rather than simply violent pagans out for scalps. In this coming of age tale Miriam keeps learning new things about judgments she had made about others, and in the process grows up and finds herself. This middle-school historical fiction chapter book is amazingly accurate, as it should be since it was based on the true account written by Susannah in the early 1800s. A lot of fun, and made me think about the judgments society hands down to us, and why it is important to approach what happens to us with an open heart and mind.
K**4
My goodness! the twists and turns!!
Miriam went from Connecticut, to captured by Indians, to living in Montreal with the French… this story is quite the tale with much coming from a diary of her sister, Susanna! Interesting how her life evolved in a time of war and unrest.
M**N
An adolecent's journey
Having read in various books of the French and Indian war of Susanah Johnson's captivity and ordeal, I came across this fictionalized account set through the eyes of her sister, Miriam. Being curious, I purchased it. This is the life developing story of a teenage girl and in that it is a good story. Taking the character from her abduction by savages near fort Number Four (whose attrocities are well documented) to her captivity (something not so well documented)in the native settlement of St. Franceis to her being deliverered to Montreal (she had been sold though no details are shown) in New France to her eventual repatriation. Based on a true story narrated by the heroine's sister Susanna Johnson in 1807, and containing numerous historical innacuracies and clearly some early Politically correct biases of the auttor,this will be interesting reading to a teenager as well as an adult. Though due to lack of availablility, I do not fault the author's numerous historical and cultural inaccuracies in her story, I must confess I do not care for the author portraying the character as narrow minded in comparison to the Abanakis whose label of Savages is well deserved and their attrocities are well documented or of the Catholic French who were hardly the most tolerant of people as French Huegenots in France and many English protestant captives discovered after being sold to them by the natives. Indeed though there is much reported of english captives being purchased from the natives by their French patrons not much is out on the details. Certainly the proto-political correctness could have been done without. Otherwise it is a good story as far as story telling goes. I feel, with proper research to correct its flaws, it would make a nice tv movie for kids.
J**A
Excellent book!
Bought this for our upcoming homeschool year and I could not put it down!! So so good!!
L**A
A Classic of Juvenile Literature
Calico Captive is a classic of juvenile literature. It has been close to fifty years since I read this book for the first time. Then I was young and I identified with Miriam as a young girl hungry to experience the life who is thrust into a world of fear and excitement when she and her sister's family are captured by native americans and subsequently sold into slavery to the French in Montreal. This time I read the book with a more experienced eye and I appreciated the careful handling of the culture shocks Miriam encountered during her captivity. At first the natives are animals to Miriam until she comes to see their humanity even though she is very afraid for herself and her family. Later, she must deal with the religious differences she encounters in Catholic Montreal. Miriam is a good puritan girl who has been taught that Papists are evil and she has to see through her cultural prejudices and reach an understanding of these people. I enjoyed the history that is accurately portrayed as it encoumpases political, social, and religious differences and skillfully sends the message that people are people everywhere. I hope that young readers will find this book and love it as much as I did so many years ago when I was young and that I do now as a mature woman.
E**S
Great read
I book this book to use in the classroom. It was a great read from one of my favorite authors. At least one of my students chose it for their historical fiction requirement. It is well-written and a wonderful supplement to your history curriculum. I found myself transported to a different time and place. I also found myself frustrated with the selfishness of the main character.
A**U
I've read this book time and again, it is interesting and enjoyable. I read it as a teen and now again as an adult - you will find you see things differently.
Z**R
Its the year 1807 and we are in the colonies of Charlestown, New Hampshire, Miriam Willard, her sister and husband with their three children awake one morning to find the house over run by Indians. They are all taken captive and forced to march north to the Indian village where they are kept as slaves, the couples six year old son adapts well to Indian life but the others find captivity hard. Miriam and her sisters husband along with the two young girls are taken on the Montreal where they were sold into slavery, her sister follows at a later date, this very well written story goes on to show the life they led and their eventual freedom many years later.
D**N
My sister LOVED this book as a teenager. Reading it as an adult (our only copy was hogged by said sister). The reason I nixed the stars, even though I enjoyed the story, was because I do take issue with portrayal of the First Nations, though I can see how this is put from the point of view of a white colonist. TL;DR - I enjoyed the book as a fantasy situation because I'm a white woman and can relate to the protagonist in a Mary Sue way. Regardless, I take issue with some of the portrayals put forth.
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