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23 Reviews
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Summary and Review,
By Laurenda and Kelli (Oxford, Mississippi) - See all my reviews
This review is from: North By Night (Turtleback School & Library Binding Edition) (School & Library Binding)
Life in the 1850's was an intense period in American history. Conflicts between the northern and southern ways of life caused major conflicts. Life was challenging but families worked together to create thriving homes. Set up as a series of dated journal entries, the pages of this engaging novel are straight from the mind of a courageous heroine, sixteen-year old Lucinda Spencer. Between farming chores and a blossoming love life, Lucinda struggles with an abundance of challenges and choices. Her great passion in life since the age of 12 is to work with her family on the Underground Railroad and help fugitive slaves escape to freedom in Canada. When other local Ohio conductors are caught breaking the Fugitive Slave Laws by harboring runaways, her family must be more cautious than ever. Despite the consequences of imprisonment and high fines, Lucy braves her greatest challenge when an expectant mother is among a group of weary fugitives in the dead of winter. While her friends believe she is nursing the respected Miss Aurelia during her alleged battle with smallpox, she is actually helping the widow, a fellow worker, prepare her new friends for their journey north. During this time, she communicates with her loved ones through written letters and with the reader through journal entries. Lucy quickly learns there is more to life than traditional sewing and cooking skills. She deals with complex issues of loyalty and diversity. In the end, when she is forced to make the ultimate sacrifice, she learns the real meaning of sacrificial love. Although written on a fifth grade level, this book has implied themes of slavery and adult relationships that may seem more suitable for seventh or eight graders. It could easily be used to reinforce lessons in history, geography, music, and character values. An interesting approach to a shadowy topic all as seen through the eyes of one exceedingly valiant teenage girl, North by Night is historical fiction at its best.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Lessons of growing up, love, and responsibility,
This review is from: North by Night: A Story of the Underground Railroad (Hardcover)
Through the inspiring journal entries of a sixteen year old, young readers can feel what it must be like to work on the Underground Railroad. Lucy Spencer has been helping on the Underground Railroad since she was twelve years old. When Lucy is asked to help at the Widow Mercer's house at the age of sixteen to hide a family of runaway slaves in the attic, she doesn't hesitate. The way Lucy gets one of these slaves to freedom is so moving. I absolutely loved this book and it made me and will make readers of any age think about sacrifices that we make for people in our lives or that we should make. Readers will also get a sense of the time period that the book is set in and how it must have been back then.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
North By Night,
By Jessica (California) - See all my reviews
This review is from: North by Night: A Story of the Underground Railroad (Paperback)
When I read this book, I immediately fell in love with it. Not only does it have adventure and romance, but it made me actually interested in history for once. This book is about the courageous 16-year-old abolitionist Lucinda Spencer, whose house is a station in the underground railroad. Her world is a world of slave rescue and secrecy, division between the north and south over the Fugitive Slave Laws. She sets off on the greatest adventure and deception of her life. She is to help Miss Aurelia aid runaway slaves to freedom, under the story that Miss Aurelia has small pox and Lucy is helping her to recover. Her must help nine slaves, one an expectant mother, and now her new friends prepare to go to Canada. She keeps in touch with her family and friends through letters. She learns her true beliefs and the beliefs of others and learns that for her there will be more to life than cooking and cleaning. In the end, when she must make her biggest sacrifice and give up everything she has known and loved, she learns how much she has taken for granted. This is a book that not only contains adventure and romance, but also portrays the the topic of slavery through the eyes of a brave 16-year-old heroine.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great book,
This review is from: North by Night: A Story of the Underground Railroad (Paperback)
This is a very good book about the Underground Railroad.It gives people a look of how hard life was back then.In this book,a teen- aged girl is making sacrafices that could get her killed so she can help slaves get to Canada safely.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
From a Teacher's Viewpoint,
By Tammy and Jennifer (Oxford, Mississippi) - See all my reviews
This review is from: North by Night: A Story of the Underground Railroad (Paperback)
During the 1850's the north and the south were divided over slavery. Lucy Spencer a young girl of 16, who lived in Ohio, had been helping her family run an Underground Railroad station since she was 12. Lucy's life slowly begins to change as she becomes more personally involved. Young Lucy is soon awakened by her own personal convictions concerning slavery, particularly when she befriends and becomes emotionally attached to a family fleeing north. In addition, she finds herself torn between the Presbyterian boy she always thought she would marry, and a young Quaker, whose convictions are very similar to hers but lifestyle is vastly different. Through the guidance of an older woman, Miss Aurelia, Lucy discovers an inner strength as she is drawn deeper involved in the world of the Underground Railroad. Eventually, Lucy's involvement leads her to the difficult decision of saving the life of an orphaned colored baby and as a consequence leaving her town and family forever.This is a typical coming of age story of a young northern girl who comes to the realization that she has the ability to choose for herself the direction of her life, and the convictions she must follow. This is an excellent story that weaves the reader slowly and thoughtfully into the life of Lucy and the world of the Underground Railroad. This book is an excellent resource to use with either 4th or 5th graders who are being introduced to the topic of slavery for the first time. This book also allows the teacher a rich variety of topics to integrate into other content areas such as, history, language arts, geography and social relationships.
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Good Choice for Younger Audience,
By A Customer
This review is from: North by Night: A Story of the Underground Railroad (Hardcover)
The first time I read this book, I plowed right through it: Katherine Ayers is no doubt a talented and interesting writer, who uses all the elements in a teen's life (romance, adventure, marriage, etc.) to enhance the character of Lucy Spencer. For a first time read, it was fabulous, and I'd recommend it. However, if this book is read often - which in my case, it was, due to how much I loved it - you start noticing all the little "things" that take away from the book. The exessive romance is just that - exessive. It's a tad overkill for a 16-year old of that time period. And I find the book unneccesarily sugar-coats some topics. Other than that, it was a good read. I hope Katherine Ayers comes out with more historical fiction, soon; practice makes perfect.
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
An Ohio girl helps slaves find freedom.,
By A Customer
This review is from: North by Night: A Story of the Underground Railroad (Hardcover)
A sixteen year old Ohio farm girl in the years before the Civil War, Lucinda Spenser helps runaway slaves find freedom, yet at the same time, she wonders which of the two young men vying for her affections she should choose. Asked to stay at the farm of a widow and help her with nine fugitives hiding in the attic, Lucy, who wants adventure, readily agrees. She never even begins to imagine the danger she will face over the next month in a half, and the sacrifices she will make to save an infant from a life of slavery, or the new values she will learn. A touching, beautifully written novel, Katherine Ayres's moving tale, written in the form of Lucy's diary, will teach the reader valuable lessons about life, love, sacrifices, and the true meaning of freedom.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Suspense and Decision,
This review is from: North by Night: A Story of the Underground Railroad (Paperback)
North by Night by Katherine Ayres is a very suspenseful book with the will to make your own decisions. Lucinda Spencer and her family are located on the Underground Railroad and are helping a family of abolitionists, the Strong's. She has helped for four years and is now helping Widow Mercer who is "sick with measles." Her whole family and friends help the nine fugitive slaves, who become Lucy's friends, go to Canada safely. Lucy stays away from her family for a couple of weeks, but has seen a few friends. When the time comes to help as much as she can she makes the biggest choice of her life. Will she do it or will she turn back? The end didn't finish or tie up the rest of the book, but Katherine made the previous parts very good.
5.0 out of 5 stars
One of the best Underground railroad Books,
By WesternWilson (Vancouver, BC, Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: North by Night: A Story of the Underground Railroad (Paperback)
I loved this book. I must say I wanted to see more of what happened with Lucy and Hope but, it was still a wonderful book.
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Teenager's View of the Underground Railroad,
This review is from: North by Night: A Story of the Underground Railroad (Paperback)
The story of the `Underground Railroad' comes to life through the words in Lucinda Spencer's diary. Although the book only covers two months of her life, it still offers the reader a vivid picture of the perils of runaway slaves and those who strived to help them reach freedom from slavery. Lucinda's life was affected by the choices she had made and the people who crossed her path as she toiled as an abolitionist under the disguise of tending a woman who had measles. Lucinda's choices lead her to new relationships but also caused her to sever ties with many people that she cared about who didn't and couldn't know about her work on the `railroad'. This is a bittersweet story about the need for tolerance of differences among diverse people that teaches the reader about the secret life of an `Underground Railroad' worker in the free state of Ohio in 1861. This book would be interesting to students in the 5th grade and above. Parents and teachers could use this book to teach history, geography, social relationships, art, and health.
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North by Night: A Story of the Underground Railroad by Katherine Ayres (Hardcover - October 13, 1998)
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