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BO AT BALLARD CREEK by Kirkpatrick Hill

BO AT BALLARD CREEK

by Kirkpatrick Hill illustrated by LeUyen Pham

Pub Date: June 25th, 2013
ISBN: 978-0-8050-9351-3
Publisher: Henry Holt

A warm tale set in an Alaskan gold-mining town in 1929-30.

Bo, a 5-year-old girl, was adopted as a newborn by two gruff but tenderhearted blacksmiths who’ve toiled in the mining camps of the Yukon for years. These unlikely fathers smoke a bit and swear a bit, but they love Bo with all their hearts. Theirs is an extraordinarily generous, solicitous, close-knit community, comprised of indigenous neighbors and workers from around the world. Events unfold at a leisurely pace in this narrative that’s enriched by authentic details that make the time and place come alive. Readers discover that life in a mining town means surviving brutal winters, handling day-to-day chores in all seasons while still having fun, doing backbreaking labor, and finally, actually extracting the gold from the dirt. (Readers will learn more than they probably ever needed to know about how this is accomplished.) Life in a remote backwater also entails high excitement, such as the townspeople’s first-ever sighting of an airplane and bulldozer. Warmth and love pervade this novel, an Alaskan version of the Little House books, and characters are well-drawn. Some realistically sad and frightening events occur, but the novel ends on a happy, though wistful, note. Final art was not seen, though samples are charming and reinforce the Little House feel.

Some may find this overly sweet, but Bo is an endearing Pollyanna in a parka.

(Historical fiction. 8-12)