Preview

Critical Book Review: a Coal Miners Bride; the Diary of Anetka Kaminska

Better Essays
Open Document
Open Document
978 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Critical Book Review: a Coal Miners Bride; the Diary of Anetka Kaminska
Maddie Dickson
2/10/13
Betz per. 5
Critical Book Review: A Coal Miners Bride; The Diary of Anetka Kaminska Susan Campbell Bartoletti is the author of picture books, novels, and nonfiction for children, including Newbery Honor book Hitler youth: Growing up in Hitler’s Shadow, The Sibert Medal-winning Black Potatoes, and Dear America: A Coal Miners Bride. Her work has received dozens of awards and Honors, including the NCTE Orbis Pictus award for nonfiction, the SCBWI Golden Kite Award for Nonfiction, and the Jane Addams Children’s Book Award. Bartoletti began her career as a middle school teacher and later perused a life in writing due in part to the inspiration of her students. She attended Marywood College and majored in English with a secondary education in teaching. Bartoletti’s novel, Dear America: A Coal Miners Bride features a young polish immigrant by the name of Anetka Kaminsk. The strong headed thirteen year old was raised in Sadowka, Poland with her stubborn young brother, Jozef, and her similarly strong headed grandmother, whom is referred to as Babcia. Anetka’s mother has since passed and her father (Tata) has been living in America for a year now. Her home country of Poland is under strict rule of the Czar and her Tata is in search of greater opportunities. Anetka purchases a blank journal in which she frequently records her thoughts and experiences soon before she recives a life changing letter from her Tata. He wishes Anetka to come to America with her brother and marry a coal miner by the name of Stanley Gawrych. Anetka is both angry and frightened with Tata, she is not interested in marrying someone she does not love, but she must go. Babcia does not join the children on the journey, explaining that there is nothing for her in America. The kids travel with a close friend named Leon instead who has feelings for Anetka which she does not reciprocate. Their journey to America is difficult, but not anymore so than the falsely portrayed wonders in

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Best Essays

    Womens History Lit Review

    • 1886 Words
    • 8 Pages

    A fresh, personal, bottom-up approach to the women’s labor movement in the early 20th century…

    • 1886 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Best Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    1900-1950's- Women's Roles in the West Virginia coal camps. The women here at these coal camps had very few employment opportunities outside of the home. Their primary work was critical to coal production. they fed their husbands (usually a miner), washed his clothes, took care of him when sick or injured, and raised the children who would become the next generation of mineworkers. They provided to the family income in most cases by performing domestic work for other families, produced goods for use in the home, and scavenged and bartered goods.Women's workplaces in the southern West Virginia coal camps were complicated by the existing social and economic conditions. In a variety of ways, miners' wives maneuvered within the industrial structure…

    • 138 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Louise Erdrich was born on July 6, 1954 as the eldest daughter of seven children of a Chippewa Indian mother and a German-American father in Little Falls, Minnesota but she grew in Wahpeton, North Dakota. Louis Erdrich’s cultural identity was that she was of the Chippewa Indian tribe of the Turtle Mountain Reservation in North Dakota from her mother side. At an early age Louise was encouraged by her parents to write stories and that her father would paid her a nickel a story and her mother made covers for her first books and Louise continued her writing by keeping a journal when she was in high school. Louise Erdrich is known for her first novel Love Medicine which won her the National Book Critics Circle Award in 1984, The Plague of Doves, which was a finalist for a Pulitzer Prize, and the Round House which won the National Book Award for Fiction. “Louise Erdrich”, “Poetry Foundation”, “OEDB”…

    • 695 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    *Brenda Ralph Lewis, Women at War: The Women of World War II- At Home, at Work, on the Front Line (Pleasantville, N.Y., 2002).…

    • 702 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    She wrote the book Reading the Holocaust book that had a lot of gore information. That includes jews working to kill other jew but in the end still being killed. And jews being boiled. Yet it still intrigued me to read it. Because it gave everything in detail and didn't just skip over the gore facts. Thats why in this paper i will be talking about what happened during the holocaust and why it wont happen in the U.S.A.…

    • 96 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Works of literature are able to influence all forms of society, and the authors of said literature are the forces behind it. Sarah Orne Jewett is a notable author from the nineteenth century and wrote many short stories and novels. Most of these works directly reflect Jewett’s early life in the New England countryside, and the characters take on Jewett’s childhood characteristics. Sarah Orne Jewett is an important author because she displays the many aspects of early country life to the reader.…

    • 1158 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Mildred Wirt Benson

    • 411 Words
    • 2 Pages

    In addition, Mrs. Benson was well-educated and very intelligent. In elementary school, she showed signs of being adventurous and independent. Even at a young age she published her first piece of writing. At age 14, her story appeared in a fiction magazine “St. Nicholas.” When she entered high school, Mildred was bright and was able to graduate early. She went straight to college and she graduated with a degree in English and a master’s in Journalism at the University of Iowa. Writing was a big part of Mildred’s life, and she wrote for Stratmeyer during college.…

    • 411 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Did you know Gwendolyn Brooks was the first African-American, male or female, to win the Pulitzer Prize (eNotes.com)? Brooks was born on June 7, 1917 and began to have an interest in poem early in her life. Her first poem was published at the age of thirteen in the American Childhood Magazine in 1930. Today she is known for having more than twenty books of poems published like “The Children Coming Home” (“Gwendolyn Brooks,”PoetsPath.com). In many of Brooks’s poems she uses many literary terms to elaborate more on the theme of her poems. One poem of hers called “The Bean Eaters” recounts how an old couple upholds their lives together. In the poem there is no mention of any friends or relatives of the couple that accompany them, but only their memories and their little possessions. Although they "eat beans mostly" and "dinner is a casual affair," they dine while recalling all their amusing and wonderful memories of the past (litmed.med.nyu.edu). In the poem “The Bean Eaters,” Brooks uses symbols and imagery to help her explore the theme of an elderly couple maintaining their existence.…

    • 1011 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Katherine, J. (2004). Jane Addams: A writer 's life. Urbana, IL: University of Illinois Press.…

    • 1917 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Feliks Skrzynecki Analysis

    • 1269 Words
    • 6 Pages

    This poem is divided into three sections, the first is a description of a postcard which depicts the town of Warsaw, the home of his parents, “A post card sent by a friend / Haunts me.”…

    • 1269 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Amy Tan is a passionate writer of books such as “The Joy Luck Club” and other published works. Now that we have read her text read her text “Mother Tongue”, we learn new things about her as a writer. In my first response to Amy Tan’s passage I described her as a self-motivated author as I read what motivated her to write.…

    • 447 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    I am writing a diary entry for the first time to let out something about my encumbrance or troubles, its new, letting out what I am really thinking or feeling, so here I go. My name is Gerome Pavlov and I am a loving husband and father of three children, two boys and a girl all under the age of 14. My wife, Mischa Pavlov and I are both hard working factory workers who try to provide as much and work very hard for our family, being a proletariat isn’t easy when your job is at the bottom of the social economic status, it is sort of like a food pyramid we proletariats being at the bottom of the food chain. In other words our job is to sell our labouring power in order to survive. Our customs are bad, my family and another family of three have been put with three other persons in a city apartment house in which it has crowded space, no hot water, only three double beds, roaches and one window, it’s disgraceful circumstances.…

    • 816 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Evans, Mary. "Gender and the Literature of the Holocaust: The Diary of Etty Hillesum." Women 12.3 (2001): 325-35.…

    • 1165 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    In an era overflowing with segregation and racism, a bright, young woman by the name of Gwendolyn Elizabeth Brooks emerged into the world, with not only her philosophical writing, but also her intelligent, yet gifted mindset. No one could provide such vivid, complex detail quite like she did, for it seemed to be unimaginable. Gwendolyn was one of the most skilled African-American writers to ever live in the twentieth century, being the first African-American to win a Pulitzer Prize for her popular second publication “Annie Allen”. And while that book was believed to be one of her most beloved works, “The Mother” is certainly her most calamitous. Written in such a solemn manner, “The Mother” takes a look through the psyche of a…

    • 174 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Susan Hill's Biography

    • 2183 Words
    • 9 Pages

    Novelist, children 's writer and playwright Susan (Elizabeth) Hill was born in Scarborough, England, on 5 February 1942. She was educated at Scarborough Convent School and at grammar school in Coventry, before reading English at King 's College, London, graduating in 1963 and becoming a Fellow in 1978. Her first novel, The Enclosure, was published in 1961 when she was still a student. She worked as a freelance journalist between 1963 and 1968, publishing her third novel, Gentleman and Ladies, in 1968. She became a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature in 1972 and was a presenter of BBC Radio 4 's 'Bookshelf ' from 1986 to 1987. In 1996 she started her own publishing company, Long Barn Books, editing and publishing a quarterly literary journal, Books and Company, in 1998.…

    • 2183 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Powerful Essays