A young girl in a remote Appalachian community confronts resistance and dreams of the possibilities of electricity.
It’s 1937, and few rural Americans have access to electricity—in stark contrast to those in urban areas. So when 11-year-old Cora reads that it could be coming to her southeastern Kentucky home, an area settled by Scotch Irish immigrants, she sees nothing but the wonderful opportunities that this would mean: light to study by in the evenings, better schooling, and machines to help with chores. If enough people join the rural electric cooperative, electricity will come to Shadow Mountain. Not everyone shares Cora’s enthusiasm, though, especially her herbalist mother, who fears the erecting of electric poles will disrupt the flora and fauna and that this new technology will change the way of life she values. Cora, a determined and creative problem solver, works to raise money for her one-room schoolhouse to join the cooperative and to change the minds of those most resistant, and after a moment of considerable bravery during which electricity plays a role in a lifesaving event, her mother comes around. The book takes a sensitive approach that tempers the promise of progress with an appreciation of the traditions and ways of living that will be altered. Historical details about the Frontier Nursing Service and the Pack Horse Library Project add layers to the well-developed setting.
Shines a nuanced light on rarely explored historical events.
(map, author’s note, notes and resources) (Historical fiction. 9-12)