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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Definite thumbs up from a history teacher
I assigned The Breaker Boys to my 8th grade history students during a unit on the Industrial Revolution. I wasn't sure how it would be received, but the kids loved it. It's a coming of age story that the kids can relate to, and it's a historical novel that helps them understand life during the Industrial Revolution. We appreciated how the reader gets to see both sides...
Published on January 13, 2006 by History Teacher

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Historical Approach
Text Review: The Breaker Boys
Historical Context: Industrialization and Social Class/ Lattimer Massacre, Coal Strikes/ 1896-1900
Reviewer: Mr. Sprifir
May 30, 2008

In a time of American industrialization and expansion, immigrants flowed in throughout the country to seize opportunities for economic freedom from their home countries. The...
Published on June 2, 2008 by William Sheng


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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Definite thumbs up from a history teacher, January 13, 2006
By 
This review is from: The Breaker Boys (Hardcover)
I assigned The Breaker Boys to my 8th grade history students during a unit on the Industrial Revolution. I wasn't sure how it would be received, but the kids loved it. It's a coming of age story that the kids can relate to, and it's a historical novel that helps them understand life during the Industrial Revolution. We appreciated how the reader gets to see both sides of the story (the coal mine owners' side and the workers' side), rather than having the common assumption reinforced that workers then were just victimized by mine owners. The book was accessible for all of my students, probably because it interested them, and appealing even to my strongest readers. Teachers, give this one a try. You will not be disappointed.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Compelling and crisply written, February 15, 2006
By 
George R. Carter (Mullica Hill, N.J.) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Breaker Boys (Hardcover)
"The Breaker Boys" is an adventure into an era of U.S. history about which little is known today. Even people who read a lot of history don't tend to focus on turn-of-the-20th-century society -- much less as seen through the eyes of a young boy. That the author would choose to bring this period to life is quite commendable. The book also delves into the ethnicity of the immigrant "breaker boys," explaining how their families had recently arrived from Europe. The book is a much-needed history lesson.
That said, it's an exciting, fast read. It has just enough twists of the plot to be believable while not predictable.
It's so worthwhile for teens to read this kind of book that I called the library and asked the children's librarian to consider purchasing the other two.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Pat Hughes, author of Guerrilla Season, does it again!!, September 7, 2004
This review is from: The Breaker Boys (Hardcover)
Loved it!

Pat Hughes has done it again by putting the reader right in the middle of the action. This writers deft ability to make the characters as well as the setting come to life seems to put the reader right there in coal country. You become one of the family. Not just the wealthy Tanner family, but Johnny's family as well. Johnny's family are poor Polish immigrants who work in the mine that the Tanner family owns. Rich or poor this story is about family, friendship, and the trials and tribulations of a young man. Nate Tanner is angry with his family and befriends the young mine workers known as "The Breaker Boys," especially Johnny. Only Nate has a secret. And when Nate finds that Johnny and the other mine workers are planning a strike against his family, this troubled young man must contemplate whom to side with, his family or his friends.


I couldn't put it down! Everything from the clomping of the horses hooves pulling the Tanner family Brougham through town, to the conflict at the Lattimer Mines on September 10, 1897, keeps you right in the middle of Pennsylvania coal country ! Another job well done! Thanks Pat Hughes for another riveting novel!
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Complex novel for a complex time., September 5, 2004
This review is from: The Breaker Boys (Hardcover)
The Breaker Boys does a lot of things well. It gives us a glimpse of child labor in coal mining country, but it refuses to do so with grim drudgery. The boys of the story are still boys -- mischievious, rowdy, and passionate. It's a story about friendship -- the transforming power of friendship and the pain of it, as well. It's a coming of age story as the unpleasant son of well-to-do mine owners comes to understand both the immigrant mine workers and his own family of mine owners. Pat Hughes refuses to take the easy road where the workers are all good and the owners are evil. As a result, The Breaker Boys is a complex novel that will endure -- a story of family, duty, and maturity -- and an excellent addition to historical fiction of the time period.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Breaker Boys rox my sox, January 15, 2006
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This review is from: The Breaker Boys (Hardcover)
I really loved reading the Breaker Boys. Pat Hughes did a wonderful job here, I learned so much aboout the Industrial Revolution and i didn't even relize it. It's a really fun, easy read and ties in perfectlly with what we are learning in history about miners and child labor in the Industrial Revolution. I think if you're considering reading this book you should.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars the age-old struggle of choosing between friends or family, October 22, 2004
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This review is from: The Breaker Boys (Hardcover)
It's 1897, and everyone is happy because summer vacation is close. Well, not everyone. Twelve-year-old Nathan Tanner just got expelled from boarding school because of his temper and bad behavior. He has no friends and doesn't get along well with his family. While riding his bicycle one day, he meets the Breaker Boys, who do dangerous work in the coal mines for his father, a coal mine operator.

Nathan starts hanging out with the Breaker Boys every day and becomes very good friends with them, especially Johnny. However, Nathan must hide the fact that he's the boss's son. As Johnny and Nathan grow closer, Nathan learns that, because of unfair wages and treatment, some of the mine workers are forming unions and going on strike. Because of this, tensions rise in Nathan's family. Will he take his family's side on the issue and help them, or will he betray them to help his friend?

In her first novel, GUERRILLA SEASON, Pat Hughes traveled back in time to show readers how different life was because of war, how children's lives were affected by war and why they were forced to become adults so early. THE BREAKER BOYS, which is a fascinating second novel from Hughes, is no different.

--- Reviewed by Ashley Hartlaub
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Historical Approach, June 2, 2008
By 
This review is from: The Breaker Boys (Hardcover)
Text Review: The Breaker Boys
Historical Context: Industrialization and Social Class/ Lattimer Massacre, Coal Strikes/ 1896-1900
Reviewer: Mr. Sprifir
May 30, 2008

In a time of American industrialization and expansion, immigrants flowed in throughout the country to seize opportunities for economic freedom from their home countries. The Breaker Boys by Pat Hughes is a historical fiction novel portraying the struggle of society and the division among the rich and the poor. The main character, Nate Turner is a boy who grows up with a rich family, but struggles to adapt with societies standards. He is looked down upon by not only his family, but by his peer's as well. He is constantly in trouble and finds new ways to disgrace his family names. He soon meets immigrant workers who work for his father at the colliery, and inserts him within their society. Through this novel, readers are able to depict the varying cultures during the late 19th century, ultimately judging for themselves the impact of the immigrant labor.

The book could be counted as historically accurate because of its portrayal of the coal mines. The American Pageant skims the surface on labor strikes and unions calling the immigrant workers "aggrieved and indebted."(523) By placing a focus on the Homestead Strike, the history book emphasizes the rise of political power of the Populist party, ignoring the gains of Unions and immigrant workers. The Breaker Boys captures this tension during society and portrays a realistic life during the time of the strikes. It furthermore reveals the terrible conditions of the colliery and how immigrant workers are tied to their work. Through company stores, company houses, and company doctors The Breaker Boys displays the corruptness of business in the North, similar to that of sharecropping in the South. The characters of the novel also seem realistic as well, matching the different racial groups such as Slavs, Poles, and Irish. Although the portrayal of the immigrant boys seems to capture the depravity of life, Hughes almost glorifies them in his novel, emphasizing on their friendship, their generosity as well as their love for family. The only characteristic of the book that seems improbable is that the immigrant workers would be so eager to accept such a wealthy boy, and the social gap among the young would also be an obstacle difficult to overcome. The book would give readers a greater understanding of immigrant life and understand societal issues of that time. The book clearly gives readers two lives that we can compare and contrast. The difference between the rich and the poor gives the readers a flavor of two worlds, the privileged and the American dream, compared to a struggle to gain equality.

The Breaker Boys is a book that is easy to read. It has a strong character with a strong mindset as well as personalities. Hughes captures this inner conflict of loyalty to friends and family, that is common in young adolescents growing up, in this intense adventure. The imagery and contrast of the poor and the rich are also a great way to understand why social gaps occurred and why equity and not the same as equality. Although there are many things that are well done in this book, I would not recommend this book to a friend. This is a book with a mediocre story, a character that shows little moral development, and a rushed conclusion that suffocates the reader. The book is strongly prejudice and takes on a bias in favor of the immigrant workers. The main character almost seems too extreme and character flawed to really relate to, and includes too many characters that make it confusing and are not very important to the development of the story. If readers are looking for a quick read to understand collieries, go ahead and skim this book, but if one is looking for a good book to enjoy and recall upon, this is not it.
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The Breaker Boys
The Breaker Boys by Pat Hughes (Hardcover - September 10, 2004)
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