

Chains (The Seeds of America Trilogy) [Anderson, Laurie Halse] on desertcart.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. Chains (The Seeds of America Trilogy) Review: Wish I Could Give It More Than 5 Stars! - Some books just blow you away. Laurie Halse Anderson did that in her trilogy beginning with Chains. A National Book Award finalist this book deserves all its awards. In a time like today when we face the possible repression of our people, it behooves us to examine history. So many of us believe our founding fathers were good people. We believe what they said and did was sacrosanct. We've honor them and set them up as near dieties. But, in reality they were people. Full of flaws, just like us. Had they lost the Revolutionary War, they would have been shunned and called traitors. Having won, we herald them as heroes. In Chains we examine what it might have been like during that turbulent, uncertain time to have been a slave. The main character, Isabel, is a Negro child, trying to protect her younger sister. Alone, enslaved, abused, she struggles to achieve her rightful freedoms. The author did an amazing job of telling Isabel's story without overdramatizing the hardships. Made it easier for me to read. The times are tempestuous at best. Finding herself in New York City at the time of the British invasion, Isabel sways from the rebel side to the British side. Her goal is not a country's freedom, which she recognizes as not pertaining to her, but the freedom of herself and her sister. She'll risk her life to achieve that goal. Each chapter begins with a clip from a primary source, a newspaper article, a letter from a patriot or a British soldier, an excerpt from our historical documents. Those headings ground the chapter in history. The author strives to tell Isabel's story as accurately as she can all these years later. Book 2 and 3 are finished. Thank goodness for those of us just finding this trilogy. Because when you finish Chains, you'll not want to wait to keep reading. Here are some examples of the beautiful writing: ...Being loyal to the one who owned me gave me prickly thoughts, like burrs trapped in my shift, pressing into my skin with every step. ...There was truth in his words, hard truth, a hammer sticking a stone ..."Gossip is the foul smell of the Devil's backside," that's what Momma always said. ...Her voice sounded raw, like it had been run against a grater. The absolute essence of this first book is written in these words from Isabel's mouth: I was chained between two nations. Enjoy this wonderful series. If it doesn't win the National Book Award, it certainly should have!!i Review: learn more about the Revolutionary war and have the lessons sink into your brain because of how Isabel experiences it as a slave - Quite possibly Chains is one of the best, most difficult, mesmerizing, lilting pieces of American historical fiction I've ever read. Isabel and her 5 year old, "slow" sister Ruth are slaves. They were supposed to get their freedom upon the death of their mistress, but in a cruel twist of fairly common fate, the son of their mistress sells them to a well-to-do Tory couple on their way back to New York. Only it's 1776 and New York is caught in the grip of rebellion and political upheaval. The first person Isabel meets is the slave of a rebel patriot, Curzon, who makes it known to Isabel that any information she can pass on about her Tory master will be rewarded. But despite risking herself for the patriots and the implied promise of freedom, Isabel will contend with broken promises and refusal to acknowledge her humanity from the very men fomenting war to protest their own lack of voice and freedom. What side can a slave choose? From the first chapter Anderson sets you down in Isabel's work-a-day world and immerses you in 1776 New York. There are primary source quotations at the beginning of each chapter that only drive home the terrible irony of a time people waxed eloquent on freedom and still kept slaves. Anderson slowly strips away any naivete a reader might have as she imprisons Isabel in cruel situations where she can not care for the only precious thing she as left-- her sister, Ruth. You can learn more about famous patriots and the Revolutionary war reading this book then many a textbook-- and the lessons will sink deep in your brain because of how Isabel experiences them and the meaning it has for her own life as a slave. And Isabel's voice. A perfect balance of gritty reality, a touch of African spirituality, and that stream of consciousness sensibility that Anderson brings to her main characters that let you inside a world so utterly different from your own in a way that makes it familiar and terrifyingly real. I wouldn't necessarily hand this book to a younger YA reader without being sure they could handle some very cruel (but realistic) portrayals of slapping, beating, and at one point branding of a slave. Highly recommended.





| Best Sellers Rank | #21,771 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #6 in Children's Colonial American Historical Fiction #15 in Children's Historical Fiction on Military & Wars #20 in Children's Black & African American Story Books |
| Book 1 of 3 | Seeds of America |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars (3,473) |
| Dimensions | 5.12 x 0.84 x 7.62 inches |
| Edition | Reprint |
| Grade level | 5 - 9 |
| ISBN-10 | 1416905863 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-1416905868 |
| Item Weight | 8 ounces |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 316 pages |
| Publication date | January 5, 2010 |
| Publisher | Atheneum Books for Young Readers |
| Reading age | 10 - 13 years, from customers |
J**S
Wish I Could Give It More Than 5 Stars!
Some books just blow you away. Laurie Halse Anderson did that in her trilogy beginning with Chains. A National Book Award finalist this book deserves all its awards. In a time like today when we face the possible repression of our people, it behooves us to examine history. So many of us believe our founding fathers were good people. We believe what they said and did was sacrosanct. We've honor them and set them up as near dieties. But, in reality they were people. Full of flaws, just like us. Had they lost the Revolutionary War, they would have been shunned and called traitors. Having won, we herald them as heroes. In Chains we examine what it might have been like during that turbulent, uncertain time to have been a slave. The main character, Isabel, is a Negro child, trying to protect her younger sister. Alone, enslaved, abused, she struggles to achieve her rightful freedoms. The author did an amazing job of telling Isabel's story without overdramatizing the hardships. Made it easier for me to read. The times are tempestuous at best. Finding herself in New York City at the time of the British invasion, Isabel sways from the rebel side to the British side. Her goal is not a country's freedom, which she recognizes as not pertaining to her, but the freedom of herself and her sister. She'll risk her life to achieve that goal. Each chapter begins with a clip from a primary source, a newspaper article, a letter from a patriot or a British soldier, an excerpt from our historical documents. Those headings ground the chapter in history. The author strives to tell Isabel's story as accurately as she can all these years later. Book 2 and 3 are finished. Thank goodness for those of us just finding this trilogy. Because when you finish Chains, you'll not want to wait to keep reading. Here are some examples of the beautiful writing: ...Being loyal to the one who owned me gave me prickly thoughts, like burrs trapped in my shift, pressing into my skin with every step. ...There was truth in his words, hard truth, a hammer sticking a stone ..."Gossip is the foul smell of the Devil's backside," that's what Momma always said. ...Her voice sounded raw, like it had been run against a grater. The absolute essence of this first book is written in these words from Isabel's mouth: I was chained between two nations. Enjoy this wonderful series. If it doesn't win the National Book Award, it certainly should have!!i
K**N
learn more about the Revolutionary war and have the lessons sink into your brain because of how Isabel experiences it as a slave
Quite possibly Chains is one of the best, most difficult, mesmerizing, lilting pieces of American historical fiction I've ever read. Isabel and her 5 year old, "slow" sister Ruth are slaves. They were supposed to get their freedom upon the death of their mistress, but in a cruel twist of fairly common fate, the son of their mistress sells them to a well-to-do Tory couple on their way back to New York. Only it's 1776 and New York is caught in the grip of rebellion and political upheaval. The first person Isabel meets is the slave of a rebel patriot, Curzon, who makes it known to Isabel that any information she can pass on about her Tory master will be rewarded. But despite risking herself for the patriots and the implied promise of freedom, Isabel will contend with broken promises and refusal to acknowledge her humanity from the very men fomenting war to protest their own lack of voice and freedom. What side can a slave choose? From the first chapter Anderson sets you down in Isabel's work-a-day world and immerses you in 1776 New York. There are primary source quotations at the beginning of each chapter that only drive home the terrible irony of a time people waxed eloquent on freedom and still kept slaves. Anderson slowly strips away any naivete a reader might have as she imprisons Isabel in cruel situations where she can not care for the only precious thing she as left-- her sister, Ruth. You can learn more about famous patriots and the Revolutionary war reading this book then many a textbook-- and the lessons will sink deep in your brain because of how Isabel experiences them and the meaning it has for her own life as a slave. And Isabel's voice. A perfect balance of gritty reality, a touch of African spirituality, and that stream of consciousness sensibility that Anderson brings to her main characters that let you inside a world so utterly different from your own in a way that makes it familiar and terrifyingly real. I wouldn't necessarily hand this book to a younger YA reader without being sure they could handle some very cruel (but realistic) portrayals of slapping, beating, and at one point branding of a slave. Highly recommended.
E**6
such a fascinating story
this was both sad, and intense, made me angry, and such an interesting book to read. although it’s fictional, the point of view is a stinging critique and review of our American values. great book.
K**S
Great Read Aloud for upper elementary
This is a great book to read with 5th grade students as they learn about the revolutionary war and the formation of the US government. Allowed so many great cross-curricular connections! My students love it!
M**J
Love this
I love this series! I've bought other titles to donate to my child's school library
C**N
This book is sad with quite a lot of researched history of the time during the American War of Independence. The story centres around a slave girl and her sister in New York at the outset of war with the British. Excellent book for those who like to read of hardships experienced by the poor and those who had little choices in their life. Well worth a read.
D**N
An excellent read into American history during the Slave Trade. It is well written & even though it is a work of fiction, these things really did happen 200 + years ago.
D**S
Muy recomendable
A**A
Facile da leggere; ottima lettura per il ragazzi.
L**R
Très bon et rapide.
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