Skip navigation
Your Electronic Library on the Web Suburban Library Cooperative
Your Electronic Library on the Web
Library Catalog Reference Librarian Kids' Library Knowledge Portal Information Desk My Account Digital Library
Go Back New Search Logout

record 1 of 1 for search "0395692296"

Cover
Place Hold Find more by this author Find more on these topics Nearby items on shelf
Continue search in:
Google
The midwife's apprentice
    Cushman, Karen.
Publisher: Clarion Books,
Pub date: c1995.
Pages: 122 p. ;
ISBN: 0395692296
Item info: 22 copies checked in at Warren - Arthur Miller Branch, Chesterfield Township Library, Center Line Public Library, Fraser Public Library, Harper Woods Public Library, Lenox Township Library, Lois Wagner Memorial Library, Mt. Clemens Public Library, MacDonald Public Library, Roseville Public Library, Shelby Township Library, St. Clair Shores Public Library, Sterling Heights Public Library, Utica Public Library, Warren - Dorothy Busch Branch, and Warren - Civic Center Branch.
Holdings
Warren - Arthur Miller Branch Copies Material Location
YA FIC CUSHMAN 1 Book-21 day loan Young Adult
Chesterfield Township Library Copies Material Location
YA FIC CUSHMAN 1 Book-21 day loan Teen Area
Center Line Public Library Copies Material Location
J C NEW 1 Book-21 day loan Juvenile
J C NEW 1 Book-21 day loan Juvenile
Fraser Public Library Copies Material Location
YA FIC CUSHMAN 1 Book-21 day loan Being fixed/mended
  1 Book-21 day loan Young Adult
Harper Woods Public Library Copies Material Location
JFIC CUSHMAN 1 Book - Juvenile Juvenile
Lenox Township Library Copies Material Location
JF CUS 1 Book-21 day loan Juvenile
Lois Wagner Memorial Library Copies Material Location
J FIC CUSHMAN 1 Book-21 day loan Juvenile
MacDonald Public Library Copies Material Location
YA CUSHMAN 1 Book-21 day loan Young Adult
Mt. Clemens Public Library Copies Material Location
TA CUSHMAN 1 Book-21 day loan Teen Area
Roseville Public Library Copies Material Location
YA FIC CUSHMAN 1 Book-21 day loan Youth Services
Shelby Township Library Copies Material Location
J CUSH 1 Book-21 day loan Juvenile
St. Clair Shores Public Library Copies Material Location
Y C 2 Book-21 day loan Young Adult
Sterling Heights Public Library Copies Material Location
JFIC CUSHMAN 2 Book-21 day loan Youth Services
RJFIC CUSHMAN AWARD COLLECTION 1 Reference Youth Services
YA FIC CUSHMAN 1 Book-21 day loan Young Adult
Utica Public Library Copies Material Location
Y C (CLASSICS) 1 Book-21 day loan In Storage
Warren - Civic Center Branch Copies Material Location
YA FIC CUSHMAN 2 Book-21 day loan Young Adult
Warren - Dorothy Busch Branch Copies Material Location
YA FIC CUSHMAN 1 Book-21 day loan Young Adult
Summary
The girl known only as Brat has no family, no home and no future until she meets Jane the Midwife and becomes her apprentice. As she helps the sharp-tempered Jane deliver babies, Brat--who renames herself Alyce--gains knowledge, confidence, and the courage to want something from life. Distributed by Syndetic Solutions, Inc.
Publishers Weekly Review
Having focused on a well-born young heroine in her Newbery Honor debut novel, Catherine, Called Birdy, Cushman returns to a similar medieval English setting, this time to imagine how the other half lived. The strengths of this new, relatively brief novel match those of its predecessor: Cushman has an almost unrivaled ability to build atmosphere, and her evocation of a medieval village, if not scholarly in its authenticity, is supremely colorful and pungent. The protagonist here first appears asleep in a heap of dung; the ``rotting and moiling'' of the refuse give forth heat enough to compensate for the stench. Homeless and nameless, she can remember no time when she did not wander from village to village. She is rescued from the dung heap by a sharp-tongued local midwife, who feeds her in exchange for work. Gradually the girl forges an identity for herself and learns some timeless truths. Some of the characterizations lack consistency (particularly that of the midwife), the plot depends on a few too many conveniences and the development of the themes seems hurried--but no matter. The force of the ambience produces more than enough momentum to propel the reader from start to finish in a single happy sitting. Ages 12-up. Copyright 1995 Cahners Business Information, Inc. From: Reed Elsevier Inc. Copyright Reed Business Information
School Library Journal Review
Gr 6-9--With simplicity, wit, and humor, Cushman presents another tale of medieval England. Here readers follow the satisfying, literal and figurative journey of a homeless, nameless child called Brat, who might be 12 or 13--no one really knows. She wandered about in her early years, seeking food and any kind of refuge and, like many outsiders, gained a certain kind of wisdom about people and their ways. Still, life held little purpose beyond survival--until she meets the sharp-nosed, irritable local midwife, which is where this story begins. Jane takes her in, re-names her Beetle, and thinks of her as free labor and no competition. Always practical but initially timid, the girl expands in courage and self-awareness, acquiring a cat as a companion, naming herself Alyce, and gaining experience in the ways of midwifery. From the breathless delight of helping a boy to deliver twin calves, to the despair of failure during a difficult birth, to the triumph of a successful delivery, Alyce struggles to understand how she can allow herself to fail and yet have the determination to reach for her own place in the world. Alyce wins. Characters are sketched briefly but with telling, witty detail, and the very scents and sounds of the land and people's occupations fill each page as Alyce comes of age and heart. Earthy humor, the foibles of humans both high and low, and a fascinating mix of superstition and genuinely helpful herbal remedies attached to childbirth make this a truly delightful introduction to a world seldom seen in children's literature.Sara Miller, Rye County Day School, NY Copyright 1995 Cahners Business Information, Inc. From: Reed Elsevier Inc. Copyright Reed Business Information
Booklist Review
/*STARRED REVIEW*/Gr. 7-12. Like Cushman's 1994 Newbery Honor Book, Catherine, Called Birdy, this novel is about a strong, young woman in medieval England who finds her own way home. Of course, it's a feminist story for the 1990s, but there's no anachronism. This is a world, like Chaucer's, that's neither sweet nor fair; it's rough, dangerous, primitive, and raucous. Cushman writes with a sharp simplicity and a pulsing beat. From the first page you're caught by the spirit of the homeless, nameless waif, somewhere around 12 years old, "unwashed, unnourished, unloved, and unlovely," trying to keep warm in a dung heap. She gets the village midwife, Jane Sharp, to take her in, befriends a cat, names herself Alyce, and learns something about delivering babies. When she fails, she runs away, but she picks herself up again and returns to work and independence. Only the episode about her caring for a homeless child seems contrived. The characters are drawn with zest and affection but no false reverence. The midwife is tough and greedy ("she did her job with energy and some skill, but without care, compassion, or joy"), her method somewhere between superstition, herbal lore, common sense, and bumbling; yet she's the one who finally helps Alyce to be brave. Kids will like this short, fast-paced narrative about a hero who discovers that she's not ugly or stupid or alone. (Reviewed Mar. 15, 1995)0395692296Hazel Rochman From: Syndetics Solutions, Inc. Distributed by Syndetic Solutions, Inc.

Childrens Literature Comprehensive Database Review

Full View From Catalog
Personal Author Cushman, Karen.
Title The midwife's apprentice / by Karen Cushman.
Publication info New York : Clarion Books, c1995.
Physical descrip 122 p. ; 19 cm.
Summary In medieval England, a nameless, homeless girl is taken in by a sharp-tempered midwife, and in spite of obstacles and hardship, eventually gains the three things she most wants: a full belly, a contented heart, and a place in this world.
Subject term Middle Ages--Juvenile fiction.
Subject term Midwives--Juvenile fiction.
Go Back New Search Logout