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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. A very interesting story -- I would like to travel to Santa Fe now to see the actual church. Rinaldi linked the best of historical fiction (vivid details true to history) with the best of YA lit (real characters who are both flawed and admirable). ( )This is a great book about a girl who's father left her to get an education in a convent where she doesn't believe in the religion. One day, she brings a begger that is a carpenter and he volunteers to create the staircase for the church because when they built the church the builders forgot the staircase. She learnes a lot about believing and faith in this book. Ann Rinaldi brings history to life in every one of her books. I loved this book because just how the Medothist girl, Lizzy made friends with the "crazy lady" and the peasant carpenter. that probably could turn out to be Saint Joseph. I love this book it was really good!!!=) no reviews | add a review
Amazon.com Amazon.com Review (ISBN 0152167889, Paperback)"'This one is wise,' he said.' This one has an old spirit. She has been among us before.'" Though the Arapaho Indian on the trail praised her old spirit, 14-year-old Lizzy Enders feels anything but wise. Within only a few days, she has lost her mother to the fever, been left by her widowed father at a convent, and thrust into the strange world of the Academy of Our Lady of Light in 1870s Santa Fe. Born a Methodist, Lizzy just can't comprehend Catholicism: "All this talk of blood and martyrdom and eating flesh and agony. It was just all too much, is all." In an attempt to alleviate her misery, Lizzy befriends an unemployed elderly carpenter and suggests he be hired to build the missing staircase for the convent's new chapel. The other girls at the academy are furious, since they have been praying for a miracle to complete the stairs, not an old beggar. Can she convince them that this aged man, with his real tools, is better than an ephemeral miracle? What Lizzy has to discover for herself is that sometimes miracles come disguised in nun's habits... or carpenter's sandals.Based on a legend of a real chapel stairway in Santa Fe, The Staircase is a lively historical fiction that successfully merges myth, religion, and old-fashioned pioneer sensibility. Lizzy's need to make order of her chaotic world and define the unknown are timeless teen traits, making The Staircase a historical novel with real relevance for today's adolescent. (Ages 12 and older) --Jennifer Hubert (retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:10 -0400) The first test round has been closed. Visit the Open Shelves Classification group for details. |
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