School Library Journal Review
Gr 3-6-Times are tough on the Kansas prairie so May's family hires her out to tend house at a farm 15 miles away for the fall. Pa reminds the unhappy child that he'll be back to get her by Christmas. May knows that she'll be one less mouth to feed, but still can't bear the thought of leaving. She finds herself away from her parents and brother Hiram for the first time, and in a strange household, with a cold, unhappy bride from Ohio who cannot adjust to the hardships of prairie life. When Mrs. Oblinger runs away, and her husband sets off to bring her back, neither return, and May is left alone for several months, fighting the harsh elements and hunger and threatened by wolves, the trajectory of her story takes an unexpected turn. In desperation, she sets off on her own to get home. A subplot of May's internal struggle to teach herself to read despite an unnamed learning disability is believably realized and interspersed throughout. (The author's note indicates that dyslexia was, of course, unknown at the time.) Told in spare, vivid verse, May's story works on many levels; as a survival story, a coming-of-age tale, and a worthwhile next read for "Little House on the Prairie" fans.-Jill Heritage Maza, Montclair Kimberley Academy, Montclair, NJ (c) Copyright 2012. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Publisher's Weekly Review
Set on the Kansas prairie in the 19th century, this debut novel in verse presents a harrowing portrait of pioneer life through the perspective of 12-year-old Mavis Elizabeth Betterly, called May B. After a disappointing harvest, May's family sends her 15 miles away to help a farmer and his new bride ("She's fancy and tall,/ but I've caught it right away-/ she's hardly older than I"). May bravely faces the loss of family and the opportunity to attend school, until a homesick Mrs. Oblinger runs off for Ohio and Mr. Oblinger follows, leaving May completely alone. The spare free-verse poems effectively sketch this quietly courageous heroine, the allure and dangers of the open prairie, and the claustrophobic sod house setting. Tension mounts as the weather worsens and supplies dwindle. May's struggle with reading is particularly affecting, and readers will recognize her unnamed and poorly understood difficulty as dyslexia. Writing with compassion and a wealth of evocative details, Rose offers a memorable heroine and a testament to the will to survive. Ages 8-12. Agent: Martha Kaplan Agency. (Jan.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Horn Book Review
The verse novel form is particularly well suited to this spare survival story set on the homesteaded Kansas prairie. In late August, young May's parents send her off to work for a newly married couple on their isolated farm fifteen miles away, promising she'll be back by Christmas. But when the homesick Mrs. Oblinger runs away and her husband sets off to retrieve her and doesn't return, May is stranded alone in their sod hut, snowed in, unable to get home, unable to send for help. Dwindling supplies of food and fuel, evidence of wolves, and a blizzard are the external threats that make up the tense plot, but equally dangerous are the psychological challenges of claustrophobia and despair. Only when May chooses to live fully in the present can she gather her resources for a life-saving plan. A backstory involving May's dyslexia parallels the themes of abandonment and potent effects of small, rare kindnesses. Author Rose uses a close-up lens and a fine sense of rhythm to draw us into her stark world, Little House on the Prairie without the coziness. "It's the noise that wakes me / in the darkness close as a shroud. / Wind whips around the soddy; / I imagine I hear the walls groan." sarah ellis From HORN BOOK, Copyright The Horn Book, used with permission.
Kirkus Review
(Historical fiction. 9-14)]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Review
Furious that Ma and Pa have sent her out to work for the money they need, May Betts, 11, finds herself in a small, sod homestead on the western Kansas prairie in the late 1870s, 15 miles away from home, caring for a new, unsettled young bride, who is just a few years older than May. When the bride takes off, her husband leaves to find her, and May is all alone frightened, furious, abandoned. Can she survive the five months until her parents come to collect her at Christmas? Told in very short lines, the spare free verse in spacious type is a fast read, poetic and immediate. The daily physical details are the heart of the survival story of finding food and keeping warm and safe as the snow comes, all against the dramatic backdrop of the prairie. The vast landscape is home to May, but to the new bride, the quiet is thunderous as a storm, the way / it hounds you / inside / outside / nighttime / day. Of course, Little House fans will grab this.--Rochman, Hazel Copyright 2010 Booklist