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Changes for Samantha: A Winter Story (American Girls Collection)

Changes for Samantha: A Winter Story (American Girls Collection)

List Price: $6.95
Your Price: $6.26
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Helping a homeless friend
Review: I liked this book alot.It is about a girl named Samantha who lives with her aunt and uncle while her grandma is on a cruise with her fiance.Nellies parents just died and she has too go with her uncle but then her uncle mistreats her and her sisters so now Nellie and her sisters have to go to a orphanage with a very cruel lady what else could go wrong?

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Samantha's saga closes with a bang
Review: Rounding out the Samantha series, our young protagonist now heads off to New York to live with her newly married Uncle Gard and Aunt Cornelia. In contrast to the staid and demure life she knew with Gradmary, turn of the century New York City is bustling with energy, activty....and injustice.

Samantha discovers her old friend Nellie is also in the area, but fell on harder times when her uncle turned out to be abusive, and the best the equally impoverished woman downstairs could do was to take Nellie and sibblings to the local orphanage. Even if she personally liked them, this woman also realized the times they all lived in did not provide the means for reasonable support options.

Decidely more sober, coiffed, and put together than Miss Hannigan of Annie fame, the directress Miss Frouchy has simmilary warped social betterment ideas. Reinforcing the Victorian immutability of economic class and punnitative 'stain' of institutionalization, Nellie's hair is drab and she wears an equally unbecoming sack (which appears to be constructed of burlap).

Yet, this same social structure can be easily altered as demonstrated by Aunt Cornelia and Uncle Gard's adoption of Nellie and her sisters into their own homes---not as servants, but offspring. Because adoption of older children (from any social class, let alone low-income) was especially radical in the Victorian era, and still today (where infants are prefered)the story is a bit difficult to believe at this point, but the charming illustrations manage to convey friendship and loyalty throughout.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Excellent book
Review: Ten-year-old Samantha Parkington, who is living in New York City with her Aunt Cornelia and Uncle Gard, learns that her best friend Nellie and Nellie's sisters, Bridget and Jenny, are living an an orphanage. Samantha secretly goes to visit her and finds out that Nellie and her sisters are about to be seperated. So Samantha hides them in her house. But soon the grumpy maid, Gertrude, finds out that Samantha is hiding them. What will Uncle Gard and Aunt Cornelia decide to do with Nellie and her sisters? Read this book and find out!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Helping a homeless friend
Review: This is another in the American Girls Short Stories series about Samantha Parkington, a nine-year-old orphan girl living in the America of 1904. In this book, Samantha is appalled when she learns that the parents of her friend Nellie have died of influenza, and now she and her sisters are in an orphanage. Nellie isn't too unhappy, as she can stay together with her sisters, but when Nellie is scheduled to ride an Orphan Train out West, Samantha must take action.

The final chapter of this book contains a highly informative chapter on life in 1904 America. This is another excellent American Girls book. This book certainly shows the seamier side of the "good old days." In this book, the treatment of orphans is covered. My daughter and I recommend this book very highly.


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