The narrative is historically accurate, which includes racial slurs that would be unthinkable in polite society today (Quaver prepares readers for this in a thoughtful author’s note before the first chapter.) As well, some of Quaver’s ordeals for Elly—which include parental death, institutional abuse, and human trafficking—are harrowing, though Elly’s spirit lights even the darkest passages. Quaver continually invents arresting scenarios and characters, rendered in sharp, memorable prose. A subplot with a growing list of murders of young women in every location the troupe travels and a hinted family rift between Elly’s parents and their families are teased, but not gone into in great detail, promising threads to entice readers for the next book.
Elly’s many trials before becoming a teenager would be hard to imagine even in an octogenarian’s experiences, although Quaver carries them all off with a certain sense of derring-do. It’s impossible not to root for this determined young girl, who refuses to let anything at all—whether it’s a devastating earthquake or a daring escape from a questionable institution—stop her determined moves forward.
Takeaway: The start of orphan Elly’s unfortunate but engaging 20th century journey
Comparable Titles: Stacey Lee’s Outrun the Moon, Megan Chance’s A Splendid Ruin.
Production grades
Cover: A-
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: A-
Editing: A
Marketing copy: A-