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Letters to Missy Violet

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

A heartwarming coming-of-age story set in the rural South.

With her friend Missy Violet away in Florida, Viney has big shoes to fill. While there are ailing neighbors to comfort, Viney's favorite teacher has left school—and Viney's irrepressible cousin Charles continues his mischief-making. Through short, powerful vignettes and letters between Missy Violet, Viney, and others, the day-to-day happenings in this warm southern town come to life.

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  • Reviews

    • Kirkus

      November 15, 2011
      This Depression-era gem, a follow-up to Hathaway's debut (Missy Violet & Me, 2008), offers a child's-eye view on America's racial inequities. Like its predecessor, the novel utilizes the epistolary format with minimal narration. Viewed primarily through the lens of young Viney, the letters feel real, as though discovered in an old cigar box. Viney updates Missy Violet, a midwife traveling to care for a sick relative, on everything from the sour disposition of her schoolteacher to a fearful encounter in the woods with the Ku Klux Klan, from the hilarious wedding of a homely spinster to the courtship of a curmudgeonly codger called "Som Grit" with the honest simplicity of one who has lived these events. Missy Violet's responses are measured and reassuring. Hathaway's tone never surpasses a child's reckoning, allowing readers to respond to its gentleness and the authenticity of its voices. She imbues delicate little passages with more love than a Valentine and weaves difficult bits of history into everyday life, reminding readers that America was born from hard times and that its people continue to develop roses amid thorns. Like a warm cup of alphabet soup, this offering packs several essential ingredients--hope, love, despair, courage, family, honor--into a hearty, child-size blend. (Historical fiction. 6-9)

      (COPYRIGHT (2011) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)

    • School Library Journal

      January 1, 2012

      Gr 4-6-In this continuation of Missy Violet & Me (Houghton Harcourt, 2004), Hathaway again brings the African-American Windbush family and the rural South of 1929 to life through episodic chapters. Missy Violet, the midwife who enlisted 11-year-old Viney Windbush as her assistant in the healing arts, has been called to Florida to care for her sick brother. In her absence, Viney navigates the tricky waters of adolescence on her own, but finds it helpful along the way to confide in Missy Violet through letters. Whether Viney is expressing frustration about her cousin Charles, who is living with them temporarily, or fear about the run-in she and Charles had with the Ku Klux Klan, she finds guidance in Missy Violet's wisdom. Secondary characters are well developed through the correspondence: Viney's parents are at odds on whether to move the family North for more opportunity; her older sister has begun courting; her brother carries around so much anger toward whites that Mrs. Windbush fears he will be killed. In addition to the Windbush family members, readers learn about the various townspeople as Viney makes the rounds in Missy Violet's absence to ensure that Miss Roula is getting her boneset tonic and that little Maggie Dockery is exercising her underdeveloped hands. A few letters to Missy Violet from Charles and Mrs. Windbush provide a nice counterpoint to Viney's voice. This engaging piece of historical fiction is a solid choice for fans of the "Dear America" series (Scholastic), and the length of the book will appeal to reluctant readers.-Kim Dare, Fairfax County Public Schools, VA

      Copyright 2012 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      March 15, 2012
      Grades 3-5 In this sequel that continues the warm realism of Missy Violet and Me (2004), Viney, 11, talks about growing up in a southern black family in 1929, and she shares her hopes and problems in letters to her beloved mentor, the midwife Missy Violet, who writes back with loving concern. History is personalized in Viney's frightening encounter with the Klan and in Papa's dream of migrating north when he is laid off; and whether the setting is a wedding, a funeral, or a classroom, Viney's spare narrative will hold readers with the dramatic details of her daily life.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2012, American Library Association.)

    • The Horn Book

      January 1, 2012
      After spending the summer of 1929 as a midwife's assistant (Missy Violet and Me), eleven-year-old Viney returns to school with a newfound compassion for the people she has gotten to know through Missy Violet. Missy Violet seems to know everyone -- rich and poor, black and white -- in their small Southern town and to understand what makes them tick. When she leaves town temporarily to care for an ailing brother, Viney keeps in touch through a series of letters in which she recounts the major events in her life: losing the friendly new teacher and regaining the old cranky one; observing her older sister's suitors; entering an essay contest; and coming upon a secret K.K.K. meeting in the woods. This last account is harrowing, as Viney and her pesky cousin Charles are caught, tied up, and then covertly set loose by a Klansman's young son. Although the adults downplay the incident ("Papa said not to worry so much about it, that all colored children look the same to Mr. Lordnorth"), fear and anger continue to bubble just beneath the surface of this otherwise breezy novel. Overall, the book offers humor, wisdom, warmth, and plenty of small-town drama. While the letters provide different perspectives on the events, they may also impede some younger readers, particularly those written by cousin Charles, which are filled with invented spellings and set in a typeface that's meant to look like scrawled handwriting. That's unfortunate, because Charles has more than a little in common with Bud Caldwell, the popular hero of Bud, Not Buddy (rev. 11/99). kathleen t. horning

      (Copyright 2012 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

    • The Horn Book

      July 1, 2012
      When Missy Violet leaves town temporarily to care for an ailing brother, Viney (Missy Violet and Me) keeps in touch through letters recounting the major events in her life: observing her sister's suitors; entering an essay contest; and coming upon a secret K.K.K. meeting (a harrowing account in an otherwise breezy novel). The book offers humor, wisdom, warmth, and plenty of small-town drama.

      (Copyright 2012 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

Formats

  • OverDrive Read
  • EPUB ebook

Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:5
  • Interest Level:4-8(MG)
  • Text Difficulty:3-4

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