Eunice Boeve


Review by Ruth Godfrey, Children's Librarian, Morgantown Public library, Morgantown,West Virginia
This book examines the hardships a family faced in the 1850s when the father leaves the family to go to California during the Gold Rush. The book portrayed the time period in a realistic manner and showed how the family overcame a variety of problems to make a better life for themselves. The story is an interesting one that older children will enjoy reading.

Historical Novels Review Online
by Mary S. Moffat

A Window to the World, Eunice Boeve, Publish America, 2004, paperback, 110 pages, ISBN 1413732127
This book is about nine months in the life of Annie Duncan, a twelve-year-old girl growing up in Virginia in 1850. Through Annie’s eyes we see ordinary everyday things like Annie going to school with her best friend, hearing that the teacher is leaving to get married and wondering if there will be a replacement teacher or if the school will have to be closed. In the spring there is the gathering of the syrup from the maple trees. There are also sad times as when her young brother is very ill and they all fear he will die. Other sad times are when the old dog dies and, later, his replacement is killed by snakes.

But these are no ordinary times for young Annie. The year before her father left to go to California to make his fortune in the gold mines. For a long time there is no news of him and then a letter arrives from one of the men who had left with him. They had all been sick but were getting better. But they needed meat and Annie’s father had ridden into the hills to shoot some. He never came back and he was feared dead.

Annie is devastated by the news but her problems are only beginning. Her Ma is distraught but eventually she pulls herself together. She then begins to worry how she will provide for her family now she is on her own. A widower –– a Mr Snell –– comes to live with his daughter near by. He starts to pay court to Annie’s mother. He is pompous and obnoxious and Annie hates him. Surely her mother will not marry him –– even if such a marriage will allow her older brother to leave the farm and go to study law?

Then this courtship results in danger for the Duncan family. The Duncans are all firmly opposed to slavery but Mr Snell supports it. Annie finds a runaway slave and the family hide him and try to help him. But it is not just the slave hunters and the forces of the law that they have to hide him from. It is also Mr Snell.

Do the Duncans manage to get the slave to freedom? Does Annie’s mother marry Mr Snell? And is Annie’s father really dead or does he survive to come back to his family?

Despite its relative brevity this book gives a good picture of life in rural Virginia in the years before the Civil War. There is also much information about the fugitive slave laws just trickled into the story.

Above all the position of women is made abundantly clear. Mrs Duncan does not even like Mr Snell let alone love him and yet she is prepared to sacrifice herself so that her son can become a lawyer. Mr Snell tells her quite bluntly that when they are married he will say how the farm is to be run –– and he will make sure they have slaves, despite his prospective wife’s objections. Another time Ma says she wishes women could have the vote. This is greeted by laughs and sneers.

"Women voting? Why the coloreds will be voting sooner than women. And that means never."

And that is the man Ma is thinking of marrying just so that she can provide for her family.

Recommended for girls of eleven plus.

A Window to the World

The Window to the World
A Review

Annie Duncan and her family must carry on without Pa. Pa leaves the family behind to go to California in search of gold. With no word from Pa, they wonder, did he really make the trip; is he dead or alive?

This twelve-year-old girl has lots of things to worry about. While out on a walk she meets an old man with her family cow, Blossom. He had “borrowed” the cow so that his guests could have milk. With the problem of run-away slaves in the area Annie thinks it is possible the old man needed the cow for his “guests”; could they be run-away slaves?

Author, Eunice Boeve, puts the reader right in the middle of the life of this young girl, her two brothers and her Ma and all the problems they face. With Pa gone and no word from him Ma meets a very well spoken gentleman. Annie does not like this man and she is afraid that Ma will marry him and if this happens she knows he will move the family away from their remote West Virginia farm.

The story weaves around the family and this reader had a hard time putting the book down. Annie is a very intelligent twelve-year-old, she still wonders about her Pa and hope to hear from him someday.

This is a book that really touched my heart. The Author, Eunice Boeve, put a great deal of love in this book as she does in all her books.

Dorothy
Yukon, Oklahoma

Excerpt:

The moon came out of the gathering clouds and shown down on the prone body of the red wolf. In death the fierce jaws had released the old speckled hen, but it too was dead. Aroused from sleep by Spinner barking, we had tumbled out of bed, Patrick grabbing the gun as he went out the door. He shot the animal as it came out of the chicken house, the hen limp in its mouth.
As Patrick knelt to examine the carcass, he noted aloud that the wolf had pups she hadn't yet weaned and that one of her back legs had been broken. "I'm afraid the old girl was desperate," he said. "Crippled like she was, she must of had a tough time catching anything to eat. I expect that's why she risked coming here."
Ma frowned. "She looks to be just skin stretched over bone."
"I know." Patrick sighed. "I bet her mate is dead, too. In a way I wish my shot would have missed her."
"Except she'd have been back," Ma said. "I'm not over fond of feeding all our hens to a wolf family." She lifted her gaze to the dark, jagged outline of the mountains, muttered something, and went back to the house.
I had trouble sleeping the rest of the night. I kept imagining the baby wolves huddled in their den, whimpering for their mother. They must have been on Patrick's mind,too, for the next day, when it started raining early in the morning, making the fields too muddy to work, he took Spinner and his gun and headed up into the hills.
The rain stopped by midmorning and the sun came out hot and bright. By noontime or soon after, we expected to see Patrcik come down out of the hills, Spinner at his side. But by chore time, he still wasn't home.
"Well, let's get the milking done," Ma said. "I can't imagine what's keeping him."
We milked all the cows but Blossom. We had let her go dry as she was due to have a new calf later this spring. Ma split up enough wood to fill the wood box and I fed the chickens and the hogs.
At bedtime, Ma took Jackson up into the loft and put him to bed. Afterwards she started a small fire in the stove. "I'll heat some water for tea," she said.
It had been hot and steamy after the rain, but with sundown a north wind had risen, chilling the air. The tea, though warm and soothing, did not take away the cold fear that was growing in me, the fear that something had happened to Patrick.
We sat side by side, Ma in her big rocker, her feet on the little stool Pa had made for her one Christmas. I sat in Pa's chair, my feet curled up under me. We said little to each other,our ears tuned to catch any sound that would mean Patrick was home. But only the wind in the trees and the occasional call of an owl disturbed the silence of the night.
I wished Pa could be here, if only for just this little while. He would have gone hours ago to look for Patrick, "reading sign" as he'd have called the hunt for whatever faint trail Patrick and Spinner had left behind. Pa's keen eyes saw what most of us could not. To partial footprints, to bent grass and broken twigs, he read the woods as easily as Patrick read words in a book. I was dwelling on those thoughts, my mind's eye seeing Pa moving silently through the trees with careful steps, open ears, and searching eyes, when Ma said, "Maybe I was a fool for letting your pa go off to California without us."
Startled, I uncurled my feet and dropped them to the floor. "What?" I said.

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