Comments: I liked Owen. I was rooting for him to survive not only his harsh life but to survive this frightening time during history. Reviews suggest that Owen seems too insightful for his age. The setting was fascinating. I experienced it through sight, sound, and smell.
There are some violent scenes. Men pay Lord Hathaway, the owner of the floating circus money to board the boat to feed live animals to ravenous lions. In another scene a runaway slave boards the riverboat and is hunted down by slave catchers. Owen gets caught in the middle. He sees the slave and when questioned he lies to the slave catchers about his sighting. Had he been charged for aiding a slave under the Fugitive Slave Act of 1950, he could have faced 6 months in prison and a hefty fine.
Author's note includes history of the floating circus, general history of the circus including Dan Rice "whose distinctive looks were the inspiration for the "Uncle Sam" figure", slavery during that time and the break out of yellow fever in New Orleans.
Audience: 5th-6th grade and up
3 comments:
Oooh, sounds interesting. Did the feeding to the lions bother you? The story line kind of reminds me of Water for Elephants which I loved. Can't wait to read this one. Thanks!!! Bonnie
Yes because I thought of children reading this pretty graphic violent adult act all for the sake of entertainment for these men. This brings us back to violence in The Underneath. May be I am just too sensitive? May be children won't be bother by this at all.
thank you for your help :/ you help me with my book report cuz i did not know what was going on in the book
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