Wealthy, orphaned Colley is kidnapped, placed in the awful Broggin Home for Boys, and put to work in a dangerous glass factory. Someone wants Colley dead, but that person has not counted on five scrappy boys, fellow inmates, who are determined that Colley will live.
Award-winning American children's writer. Has received, among others, the NLAPW Children's Book Award and International Youth Library "Best of the Best" for 'Claudia' (2001), as well as the William Allen White Children's Book Award for 'Peppermints in the Parlor' (1983).
Wallace was born and spent her childhood in China, but then moved to the United States. San Francisco was often a port of entry for her family, who lived in a huge, white-pillared mansion on the side of a hill, later to become the Sugar Hill Hall mansion which served as the setting for some of her most popular books. She was a UCLA graduate.
Wallace won two Edgar Allan Poe Awards from the Mystery Writers of America for 'The Twin in the Tavern' (1994) and for 'Sparrows in the Scullery' (1998). 'Cousins in The Castle' (1997 and 'Ghosts in the Gallery' (2001) were also nominated for an Edgar Award.
Another great YA book by Barbara Brooks Wallace. A little mystery taking place in New York. Boys who were taken off the streets to work in factories under the guise of helping them.
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I must have read this book 400 times as a kid. It's my favorite Barbara Brooks Wallace book... which might be weird, because its about a group of boys, and i am certainly not that. But it is about a group of friends that make their own found-family. It's undoubtedly written for a younger audience, so if you're not into that, don't read this.
Very Dickensonian with hilarious and telling surnames, the author tells a parallel story to Iliver Twist very well. Spoilers : Hip is sold by his uncle to get his fortune. His cousins fiancée finds hip when she observes the school where only he can read . He makes friends with the boys his first friends and they come to live with him when he moves back up in the world
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
This is my second or third time through this book. It is a heart-warming little story. The characters are one-dimensional. But it's still a great read for children. My husband and I enjoyed it this time!
This was my favorite book as a child, and that is high praise from a bookworm. Pretty much every book by Barbara Brooks Wallace lives forever in my heart. Maybe I was obsessed with orphans? Whatever the reason, I love this book.