IS HOME MORE THAN JUST A PLACE?
This book is frankly hard to put down, for Armstrong weaves a
compelling story of interracial relationships—a tale within a tale, in fact. Spanning three generations and alternating Time between 1855 (when slavery was a grim reality) and 1896 STEAL AWAY presents readers with a literary device w known as Shared Narrative, so that each girl has the opportunity to offer a personal account of her flight from Virginia to a new life up North.
Both their contemporary counterparts, Mary and Free, are captivated, as the elderly women whom each one loves and respects recount the details of their 40-year old odyssey. As the girls share their writing-down task, they marvel at the pages which are truthfully dictated—the seal of the older women’s lifelong devotion. Will two strange girls be able to bond, by the mere act of the Retelling of the harrowing journey—for it was a both a physical challenge and an emotional commitment: to reach freedom and find a new, safe place to call Home.
Thirteen-year-old Susannah is suddenly orphaned and forced to leave the family farm in Vermont, with all its precious memories of her parents, the boy next door and her carefree existence. She must travel by train (an ordeal in itself) all the way down to a new life in Virginia, to the farm of her Reverend uncle, who firmly believes in the institution of slavery. But Susannah will never fit into this genteel Southern society; she does not even know how to treat or address her new personal slave.
Longing to put plantation life and its immoral abuse of dark-skinned human beings behind her forever, spunky Susannah resolves to run away and sneak back to the only home she has ever known. But she needs the help of more worldly-wise Bethlehem, to prepare for this dangerous enterprise. Then unexpected circumstances suddenly force both girls to depart abruptly together, with a minimum of preparation. Beth longs for Canada--a safe place on a map where slavery is prohibited. Would she feel truly safe in Vermont? Susannah has also broken the law by teaching Beth to read, and now is helping a slave escape its rightful owner.
Can two young girls disappear without a trace in an adult world of harsh realities--even disguised as boys? Will there be anyone whom they can trust on this perilous undertaking. What do they actually know of the Underground railroad? Their relationship undergoes many transformations as Susannah becomes increasingly dependent on her pessimist little companion for their mutual survival. A truly gripping tale which will captivate readers by its raw emotions and dangerous conflict.
(October 23, 2012. I welcome dialogue with teachers.)