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A SLIP OF A GIRL by Patricia Reilly Giff Kirkus Star

A SLIP OF A GIRL

by Patricia Reilly Giff

Pub Date: Aug. 13th, 2019
ISBN: 978-0-8234-3955-3
Publisher: Holiday House

Young Anna narrates in lilting, free verse her trials, tribulations, and triumphs during the 1881 Land War in Drumlish, Ireland.

“Sounds,” the first of 31 short chapters in the book’s first section, starts with high drama. While outside pulling up chickweed for tea, Anna hears screams and a crashing sound. “Dust rises up: / the house of five girls / and a mam is gone. / They’re forced out on the road, / maybe to starve.” Readers soon learn that English aristocrats have seized Irish properties, feeling empowered to arbitrarily raise rents and raze dwellings. However, what compels further reading is an immediate bond with Anna. Giff has the rare gift of using few words—but exactly the right ones—to evoke strong and varied images and feelings. Readers will be riveted as Anna tries her hardest to live up to her dying mam’s requests: that Anna take care of her developmentally disabled little sister, Nuala; keep the family’s home safe; and learn to read. There are several episodes of gripping suspense, including Anna and Nuala’s fugitive flight to Aunt Ethna’s house and encounters between a bailiff and a justifiably angry crowd. There are also tender and humorous moments. Traditional customs and language are woven into the tale as deftly as Aunt Ethna weaves at her loom. Despite the value attached to reading, it is a different skill that enables Anna to earn money—a welcome, realistic plot point. Characters all present white.

Lovely.

(glossary, photographs, author’s note) (Historical verse fiction. 10-14)