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[personal profile] osprey_archer
It is Saturday! And you know what that means: time for another essay about an American Girl heroine! This time, Caroline, the newest member of the American Girl coterie.

Lake Ontario, 1812. A British ship stops Caroline Abbott and her father while they sail their new sloop. Though the Abbotts didn’t know it, the United States and Britain are at war; and the British sailors requisition the sloop and take Caroline’s father, a master shipbuilder, captive.

And we’re off! The War of 1812 is terribly exciting and disgracefully neglected, and both for the same reason: it’s the last war where a foreign nation posed a serious threat to US sovereignty. The British actually burned down Washington DC. Apparently the embarrassment of having our capital sacked makes it a war better forgotten.

Caroline lives far away from DC, but her home on the border with Canada makes for plenty of excitement on its own. Because Caroline’s father is captive, her mother and grandmother take a more active role than they otherwise might. Her mother runs the family shipyard; her grandmother, who lived through the Revolutionary War, runs the house despite her advancing arthritis. “Don’t complain,” she always advises Caroline. “Find a way to change the situation!”

And Caroline does. When the British attack Caroline’s hometown - twice! - Caroline aids in the fight. She has her own little sea battle! She sinks her beloved skiff, the Sparrow, to block a small warship that is chasing a bateau carrying supplies to the American shipyards. (Why are there not more “girl with boat” stories? They’re at least as exciting as “girl with horse!”)

Sacrifice in the service of country is a theme throughout Caroline’s series - a theme shared only by the Molly books, I believe, and even there it’s much more muted. There’s an eerie scene where Caroline and her mother wander through the family’s beloved shipyard, where we have spent so much time over the preceding four books that it feels like Caroline’s second home, preparing to set the place on fire if the British conquer the town.

The series lacks what one might call the ficability of Felicity’s story: none of Caroline’s friendships caught my fancy quite like Felicity’s. (It helps of course that Felicity’s story has lain in the leafmold of my mind a lot longer.) But Caroline is a very taking character: eminently worth an afternoon’s time.

Date: 2012-12-04 05:20 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] konstantya.livejournal.com
Ooooh, War of 1812! I might just have to lump Caroline's book(s) in with Felicity's on my to-read list, because I LOVE the War of 1812. It also makes me want to get around to Reviewing Books I Read As a Young'un even more, because there was a trilogy of books I was moderately obsessed with that (marginally) had to do with the War of 1812. And it had boats! And had some frustrating bits even when I read it as a tween/teen, but still!

And speaking of girls with boats, you haven't happen to have read The True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle, have you? (I suspect you have, but it never hurts to ask, after all.)

I unfortunately don't have the time right now, but I can't wait to play catch-up with "Freedom for Felicity." :D

Date: 2012-12-04 09:08 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] osprey-archer.livejournal.com
They're fun books! I am always in favor of more people reading American Girl books. And writing reviews/meta posts/fic for them!

I haven't read The True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle. I read a couple of Avi's other books, Nothing but the Truth and Beyond the Western Sea, and bounced off them hard enough that I never read anything else he wrote.

It occurs to me that I may actually be writing "Freedom for Felicity" too fast for people to keep up. Maybe I'll take a breather before finishing the last chapter?

Date: 2012-12-05 01:25 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] konstantya.livejournal.com
Much like the Ann Rinaldi situation, I could never really get into any of Avi's books beyond ...Charlotte Doyle, but I very much enjoyed it. There's historical high seas murder plots adventure! And underneath all that, a rather interesting look at class relations and even gender roles. At least from what I remember--it's admittedly been at least a few years since I last read it. Anyway, it might be something you want to consider taking a chance on (when you have time, of course).

I can't speak for anyone else, obviously, but the only reason I haven't been able to keep up with the story is because I've just been dreadfully busy these past few days. If that wasn't an issue, keeping up, well, wouldn't be an issue, either. (Thursday, I keep telling myself. Thursday I'll be able to read all the new chapters!)

Date: 2012-12-05 04:14 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] osprey-archer.livejournal.com
Well, it's December, so I think a lot of people are busy - I've had a couple of other people mention they were going to read it when they found time.

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