Showing posts with label Mining. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mining. Show all posts

Monday, March 31, 2025

15. The Boxcar Librarian by Brianna Lusbuskes

listened on Audible (purchased)
464 pgs. (13:20)
2025
Adult Historical Fiction
Finished 3/31/25
Goodreads rating: 4.17
My rating: 4.5
Setting: Early 20th century Montana

My comments: Three points of view:  1930s Millie, 1920s Alice, 1910s Colette, all coming together in the end.  The story is set in Montana in various small towns and cities.  It is Alice's vision to have a library in a boxcar that travels from lumber camps to mining sites throughout Montana.  Conditions are super hard for the working men, and "the company" is the royal ruler of all.  Colette's father is a miner and a union man. Alices's father is an extremely rich mayor and supporter of "the company."  Millie is an orphan from Texas who now works in Washington DC and comes to observe the group of people that are writing a travel summary for the government.  Once I began to easily tell the three women's voices apart the story became quite fascinating.

Goodreads synopsis:  Inspired by true events, a thrilling Depression-era novel from the author of The Librarian of Burned Books about a woman’s quest to uncover a mystery surrounding a local librarian and the Boxcar Library—a converted mining train that brought books to isolated rural towns in Montana.

When Works Progress Administration (WPA) editor Millie Lang finds herself on the wrong end of a potential political scandal, she’s shipped off to Montana to work on the state’s American Guide Series—travel books intended to put the nation’s destitute writers to work.

Millie arrives to an eclectic staff claiming their missed deadlines are due to sabotage, possibly from the state’s powerful Copper Kings who don’t want their long and bloody history with union organizers aired for the rest of the country to read. But Millie begins to suspect that the answer might instead lie with the town’s mysterious librarian, Alice Monroe.

More than a decade earlier, Alice Monroe created the Boxcar Library in order to deliver books to isolated mining towns where men longed for entertainment and connection. Alice thought she found the perfect librarian to staff the train car in Colette Durand, a miner’s daughter with a shotgun and too many secrets behind her eyes. 

Now, no one in Missoula will tell Millie why both Alice and Colette went out on the inaugural journey of the Boxcar Library, but only Alice returned.

The three women’s stories dramatically converge in the search to uncover what someone is so desperately trying to what happened to Colette Durand.

Inspired by the fascinating, true history of Missoula’s Boxcar Library, the novel blends the story of the strong, courageous women who survived and thrived in the rough and rowdy West with that of the power of standing together to fight for workers’ lives. And through it all shines the capacity of books to provide connection and light to those who need it most.

Monday, January 15, 2018

PICTURE BOOK - Town is by the Sea by Joanne Schwartz

Illustrated by Sydney Smith
2017, Groundwood Books, Toronto
$19.95 HC
52 pgs.
Goodreads rating:  4.2
My rating:  4.5
Endpapers CharCOAL gray (dark)
Illustrations Black, brown & white with slight hints of color here and there.
1st line/s:  "From my house, I can see the sea."

My comments:  This is both a simple story and one that takes a lot to digest.  That might sound like an oxymoron, but It's exactly what this book is.  It's about living in a coal mining town in the 1950s, where all the men work in the mine, all their fathers worked in the mine, and now their sons will work in the mine.  The illustrations are simple...and wonderful.  The sea sparkles.  But it is black under the sea, where the miners work all day....  So much to think about and talk about!  4.5 (I have to lower my personal rating a half point for the depression factor.)


Goodreads:  A young boy wakes up to the sound of the sea, visits his grandfather’s grave after lunch and comes home to a simple family dinner with his family, but all the while his mind strays to his father digging for coal deep down under the sea. Stunning illustrations by Sydney Smith, the award-winning illustrator of Sidewalk Flowers, show the striking contrast between a sparkling seaside day and the darkness underground where the miners dig.
          With curriculum connections to communities and the history of mining, this beautifully understated and haunting story brings a piece of Canadian history to life. The ever-present ocean and inevitable pattern of life in a Cape Breton mining town will enthrall children and move adult readers.

Friday, March 23, 2012

19. Prayers for Sale - Sandra Dallas

audio read by Maggi-Meg Reed
2009 Macmillan Audio
8 unabridged cds
$39.95
Adult Historical Fiction
Lovely story, liked it a lot, 4.5stars