Sunday, December 31, 2017

MY STORY: Wrapping Up the 1800s




Zulu War is a really interesting addition to this series. Another of the better war books, like Indian Mutiny.

Jabulani's a great character and the entire book is loaded with other good characters.

It's one of those that I enjoyed, but don't have much to say about.



I feel like I could buy myself a nice meal if I had a dollar for every time I read the words "phossy jaw" between this book, Sweep's Boy and Victorian Workhouse.

This one's another during that same time period, only from the perspective of a poorer girl, not a poor boy or rich girl.

She works in a match factory, although not with the phosphorus, and gets caught up in the strike. The biggest difference between this and a lot of the other books is that she's a bit older and has romantic dalliances with her somewhat dreary boyfriend and a dashing reporter.




I enjoyed this book, because Flora's an awesome character and her grandmother is even more awesome. Her older sister's a stupid bitch though. I don't care for that uppity girl.

Flora is interested in creating "moving pictures," which she's fascinated by and she agrees with her grandmother's progressive viewpoints on suffrage and the treatment of "colonial peoples." A lot of the other characters are disturbingly racist, even though it's appropriate for them to be written that way for time.

It's a good book because it doesn't delve too much into suffrage, unlike the next one.



I think this is one of my most disliked historical books. It continues Flora's story, sort of. At the beginning, her grandmother has just died and it's come to light that she took in a ward. The young girl is the daughter of a woman that made a brief but memorable appearance in Flora's book.

While I like the character of Flora a lot, I couldn't bring myself to get much farther than a few diary entries in this. This represents the violent side of the suffrage movement and frankly, that just bores me. I don't care about vandalism or force-feeding or abuse on the picket lines. I remember it took me a long time to suffer through it on my first read and I wasn't going to do it again.

I included this one in my final 1800s write up, because the entire rest of the series is WWI and WWII. I need to get a couple more books for the WWII section, but I opted to just take another break from this line and switch to the American Girl History Mysteries for awhile. War books. *groan*

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