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15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Fifth Grade Student, Coal Creek Elem. (BVSD)
Turn Homeward Hannalee, a book by Patricia Beatty is more than a story about a family separated and in hard times. It is also a brilliant piece about the Civil War.
This story is about a 12 year old mill hand named Hannalee. Her Pa is dead and brother Davey has gone to war. The setting is Roswell, Georgia. Soon her government is burning the town. "The...
Published on March 13, 2002 by An 11-year old reader

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Oy Vey
I usually love assigned school books e.g. charlotte doyle, maniac mcgee but this one made me want to curl up inside of my desk and sleep. There are some worthless parts to this story, and though a very interesting and amazing topic the main character was lacking. With some strange plot twists (remember me by these persimmon seed buttons! [what was that about?]) and some...
Published on August 4, 2008


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15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Fifth Grade Student, Coal Creek Elem. (BVSD), March 13, 2002
Turn Homeward Hannalee, a book by Patricia Beatty is more than a story about a family separated and in hard times. It is also a brilliant piece about the Civil War.
This story is about a 12 year old mill hand named Hannalee. Her Pa is dead and brother Davey has gone to war. The setting is Roswell, Georgia. Soon her government is burning the town. "The Yankees are coming!" they shout. Soon Yankees are roaming the town, burning the mill, and taking Hannalee and her little brother Jem to Indiana because they worked in the mill that made Confederate cloth.
Hannalee and Jem need more than hope and courage to get back home to Mama. As they are leaving Mama tears off a button on her dress and gives it to Hannalee. Hannalee knows then, she must get back home.
In Kentucky, after many days of riding the train, and walking, Hannalee and Jem are put in prison. People come to buy them as servants and Hannalee is separated from Jem.
Find out what happens as Hannalee sets out on an adventure that takes courage, heart, and hope, to get Jem and go home to Mama.
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars This is the Best Book in the World, December 23, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Turn Homeward, Hannalee (Hardcover)
Turn Homeward, Hannalee is a wonderful book. It is very informational and teaches alot about the Civil War while it is also exciting and never dull. With her father dead and her brother in the war, Hannalee is separated from her mother and makes a promise to return home. Disguised as a boy, she struggles to return home to her mother. This is an amazing book that without any doubt I would suggest to read.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Turn Homeward Hannalee, October 19, 2003
A Kid's Review
What happened in this book you ask? Well I will tell you. Things that you imagined that would happen back then is not what it is compared to the book. What happened in the book was amazing. There is this 12 year old girl named Hannalee and her 10 year old brother Jem. They get kidnapped by the Yankees and get taken away from their mom who is pregnant. Once they get to their destination they are adopted for work. Hannalee runs away from the people who adopted her and travels from Ohio all the way to Hartford, Kentucky just to find her brother. Hannalee and Jem find their way back home safely.
The main character in this book is Hannalee. Hannalee is a very brave and determined girl. Hannalee is a girl that every girl would dream of being. She always thinks positive and never thinks negative.
The main conflict in this book is most likely the Civil War. Another problem that caught my eye was that the tone in which her voice seemed to be in was an unhappy one. The last problem would have to be being separated from her family in the war. And a whole lot more.
Hannalee resolved the problem by taking the lead being in control and she didn't let anything bring her down. The other thing is because she cared more about her loved ones being home and safe. She didn't believe they would get killed or sick or anything bad. She thought the whole time they were going to make it home.
My opinion of this book is a very good one. I am glad I got this book and that I had an opportunity to read this book. Would I recommend this book to others? Yes I would. The reason I would recommend this book to others is because it shows that even if you are a kid everything is possible.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An intriguing work of historical fiction..., December 27, 2006
All 12-year-old Hannalee Reed has ever known is the mill. In her small Georgia town, everyone, from children to adult, earns his or her living in the factory.

Then Yankee soldiers come and burn the mill down to halt the Confederate war effort. To her horror, the soldiers take Hannalee, her 10-year-old brother Jem and her brother's teenage fiancee Rosellen away from their families and hometown, far up north, where they are auctioned off as servants.

Desperate to stay with Jem, Hannalee cuts off her braids to disguise her brother as a girl. But the ruse fails, and Hannalee finds herself alone in the home of a Yankee couple who hate her, simply because she's Southern.

Her mind on her widowed mama, who was expected to have a baby any day, Hannalee decides she's got to head home. She runs away from her master and sets out looking for Jem and Rosellen.

Readers will enjoy the adventures of Hannalee, who is both courageous and just a regular child like themselves. The pull of home -- as poor and war-torn as it may be -- is also touching.

If you enjoy this book, be sure to check out "Be Ever Hopeful, Hannalee," which picks up the Reeds' story just after the Civil War, when they struggle to build a new life for themselves in Atlanta.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Read it!, June 4, 2000
By A Customer
This is a very adventurous book. I read it this year in 5th grade and there are a lot of exciting things that happen. It's about a girl who gets taken away from her family by the Yankees during the Civil War. But luckily she is taken in by a friend. HannaLee has to go through a lot to get back to her family, but I can't tell you if she does or not, you'll just have to read the book for yourself to find out. This was an incredible book and I wanted to get more books like it. It's a great book and I know you'll enjoy it.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent Book, But Not For Younger Readers, July 25, 2008
This is a fantastic story of little known historical events during the Civil War. It is well written, captivating, and historically accurate. The main character is endearing and brave, and all the characters throughout the book are fleshed out and very believable.

This book will educate the reader on the Civil War and broaden their perspective on what the people on both sides suffered.

The only problem with this book is that it is marketed for 9-12 year olds, and I think it is too intense for that age group. It is "heavy" emotional reading from start to finish [full of suffering, children taken from their families, loved ones dying, etc].

In addition, there are two scenes in particular that I found troubling for such a young age group: 1) There is a scene where the Yankee Soldiers get drunk and start "forcing their attentions" on the young girls who work at the Mill. This was a very tense and emotionally painful scene, and far more than the average 9yo needs to know about evil in the world. 2) There is a scene after the battle of Murfreesboro where the two young heroes of the story come upon a battlefield scene, and it is described graphically - too much so for younger kids in my opinion.

I add these as warnings for parents who may be concerned - if you are a parent who lets your 9yo watch R rated movies and play very violent video games, then this is not a problem for you. If you are a more cautious parent who tries to preserve your children's innocence at this early age, then you need to know that this book may not be appropriate for your family.

All said, it is an excellent book and would be great, educational, and entertaining reading for any teen or adult.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Oy Vey, August 4, 2008
A Kid's Review
I usually love assigned school books e.g. charlotte doyle, maniac mcgee but this one made me want to curl up inside of my desk and sleep. There are some worthless parts to this story, and though a very interesting and amazing topic the main character was lacking. With some strange plot twists (remember me by these persimmon seed buttons! [what was that about?]) and some boring bits ( being stuck in a tree for more then one chapter) This book is not my favorite.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Bring Hannalee Home WIth you, July 20, 2000
Turn Homeward Hannalee is a great way to educate yet exhilarate people with this civil war story. Hannalee is forced away from her southern town by "Blue Bellies" to work in their mill. She is seperated from her pregnant mother and through the course of the journey her younger brother is sent in a different direction. Her older brother fighting in the war that the south appears to be losing. Hannalee finds courage and uses her resolve to reunite her family. She encounters MANY hardships along the way. Does Hannalee find home? Find out! Exciting and plucky.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Student with a review, March 24, 2006
By 

This story is a bout a girl named Hannalee. Her older brother, Davey, breaks up with his girlfriend Rosellen to go to war. The Civil War. Hannalee is shipped away from her home is Georgia because she wants to go to war. Houses are burned, people are killed, and people blast cannons. Hannalee must face the hardships of her new life in war. Hannalee has to fulfill her promise to her mom about returning home to her nice and wonderful life back in Georgia.


My opinion of this book is that it was action filled. Nothing ever stopped happening and Hannalee is a very brave girl to go to war. Nothing in this book was boring or dumb.
I am writing from San Anselmo, CAlifornia
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5.0 out of 5 stars Beatty's Masterpiece, February 10, 2011
A Kid's Review
"Turn Homeward, Hannalee" by Patricia Beatty will probably be the best piece of literature I will ever read. When I first began the book, I did not know what to expect. But as soon as the Union Soldiers captured mill-workers Hannalee and Jem, I began an emotional roller-coaster ride. The children are taken to Indiana, where they are forced to be servants. But Hannalee never forgot a persimmon-seed button her mother gave to Hannalee just before parting. Hannalee ran away from her owners, and headed home. She found her brother, Jem, and took him home as well. It is a truly realistic story of devotion, determination, and family as the book progresses. Had I known that the Union soldiers had done this in the first place I would never have considered them heroes. Beatty has written a masterpiece, with deeply described characters, and a plot worthy of the highest book award available. I do not really know if this review is even scraping the surface of the emotion and reality of this beautifully written wonder. In my opinion,this book is classic literature.
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Turn Homeward, Hannalee
Turn Homeward, Hannalee by Patricia Beatty (Hardcover - October 17, 1984)
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