August's Book is Caleb's Crossing by Geraldine Brooks.
The next Greedy Reader meeting will be Tuesday, August 28 @ 2:00 pm in room Y-233.
From Publisher's Weekly: Pulitzer Prize winner Brooks (for March)
delivers a splendid historical inspired by Caleb Cheeshahteaumauck,
the first Native American to graduate from Harvard. Brooks brings the
1660s to life with evocative period detail, intriguing characters, and
a compelling story narrated by Bethia Mayfield, the outspoken
daughter of a Calvinist preacher. While exploring the island now known
as Martha's Vineyard, Bethia meets Caleb, a Wampanoag native to the
island, and they become close, clandestine friends. After Caleb loses
most of his family to smallpox, he begins to study under the tutelage
of Bethia's father. Since Bethia isn't allowed to pursue education
herself, she eavesdrops on Caleb's and her own brother's lessons.
Caleb is a gifted scholar who eventually travels, along with Bethia's
brother, to Cambridge to continue his education. Bethia tags along and
her descriptions of 17th-century Cambridge and Harvard are as
entertaining as they are enlightening (Harvard was founded by Puritans
to educate the "English and Indian youth of this country," for
instance). With Harvard expected to graduate a second Martha's
Vineyard Wampanoag Indian this year, almost three and a half centuries
after Caleb, the novel's publication is particularly timely. (May)
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