I have a huge list of historical fiction books to learn about various eras and places around the world. I am an adult but I love to read children's literature including this (relatively) new genre of small historical fiction books that give a real flavor of the times and places they depict. I want to learn about these eras but the information goes down easier when eaten in small bites. I've been doing most of my self-designed course in chronological order, starting with the Sumerians, but I skipped ahead to 19th-century California because I wanted something different for a little while.
This particular entry was more interesting than most to me, because it A) depicts life in a place not too far from where I live in the San Francisco Bay Area, places where I have myself visited; and B) was about a time and people that are very seldom written about in the history books, as far as I know. I mean, when I learned California history as a child, there were a few paragraphs in the history book about the Native Americans, then maybe a few pages about the Missions, and maybe we did a project building a scale model of a mission using sugar cubes or something, and then - BAM! gold was discovered and we became a United State! Whew, that was fast!
But now I learn, from books like this one, that hey! There were lots of poeple living here other than the missionaries and the sadly diminishing numbers of Native Californians. Lots of Californios who had their legal rights taken away from them when the Americans came here, and who lost their lands. Why didn't the history books have much about them? Anyone who's lived in California for more than a microsecond can tell that Spanish history here is huge, given all the place names (San Francisco, San Jose, Los Angeles, Sierra Nevada . . ..sometimes it seems like over half the place names here are in the Spanish language). But yet, I didn't read much about the Spanish in school, other than the missionaries (whose cruelty toward the Indians was not accurately depicted either for that matter). Sometimes it seems as if, at least when I was a child in the 70's, some people's histories were more important than others'. I don't know if textbooks nowadays are more fully representative of diversity or not, but I hope they are.
Anyway, to get back to the book (I have a habit of digressing, but I hope I made a good point), I thought it depicted the times and places of this girl's life in a very interesting and informative way. I did feel that the way her character was portrayed as a little dry and stilted; I didn't feel there was much real drama in the story. But I'm very glad I read it nonetheless. I think this would be an excellent book for a teacher to use in a unit about Latino life in the U.S., past and present. Or Native Americans' interactions with Europeans. I feel that I have a larger view of the area where I live, and a more open mind, because of it.