Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Review of THE RIVER BETWEEN US by Richard Peck

Bibliography
Peck, Richard. 2003. The River Between Us. New York, NY: Dial Books. ISBN 9780803727359

Plot Summary
The River Between Us is a hauntingly beautiful story about 15-year-old Tilly Pruitt coming of age on the banks of the Mississippi River. She is living in a nation boiling with strife whose rage is bubbling over the lives of the inhabitants of the sleepy Illinois town called Grand Tower. Tilly is consumed with helping her mother around the house and caring for her clairvoyant sister who is “like a soul in torment.” Even with whispers of impending war floating along the breeze, life feels rather common to Tilly until the fateful night when “the steamboat whistle splits the air”. Descending the steps of the Rob Roy are two mysterious figures, a young woman donning petticoats and hoop skirts and a darker woman with her hair wrapped in a bandana. The strangers decide to take room and board with Tilly’s family. It is through the lives of these southern visitors that the Pruitts learn to withstand the fires of life. Instead of shriveling in the wake of the Civil War, Tilly and her family are transformed and rise from the heat stronger than they ever imagined.

Critical Analysis
Richard Peck takes an interesting approach to the setting of his historical fiction novel, The River Between Us. He sets the first and last chapters in the “present tense” of 1916. Here we meet the grandson of Tilly Pruitt Hutchings, a woman whose youth was formed during the Civil War. Young Howard Hutchings narrates these two chapters as he describes the road trip to visit his father’s side of the family. The bulk of the novel begins in the second chapter where Tilly Pruitt rewinds the narration to the dawn of the Civil War. Peck introduces his characters through Tilly, and it is her voice that transports the reader to a hilltop beside the Mississippi River: “Even though Tower Rock was over in Missouri, with the river between us, it gave our town its name: Grand Tower. Nobody wanted to live in a town named after the devil.” Living atop the hill with Tilly are her mother, her brother Noah, and her sister Cass. Noah is bound to join the ranks under General Ulysses S. Grant; Mama is determined to stop him; and Cass is haunted by ghost and violent visions.

The main theme of the novel is transformation, specifically the transformation that comes from the people in our lives. When two enigmatic strangers arrive in Grand Tower from New Orleans, the transformation of Tilly and her family begins to take form. Peck cloaks the character of Delphine Duval in a mystery of hoop skirts, corsets, and oversized bonnets. Her even more perplexing companion, Calinda, hides herself in silence; people find complexity in her stark simplicity: “I saw this other one only in silhouette at first. She was narrower, darker, shrouded in a long plain cloak.” The events that wait ahead for the Pruitts, Delphine, and Calinda bring out an inner strength that none knew they possessed. Time also reveals a secret that eventually sets everyone free: “’I am the gens de couleur, madame,’ she said, calmly proud. ‘The free people of color, if you speak no French.’”
Peck gives special attention to details, lending the story an authentic feel. His poetic decriptives of clothing, scenery, and people help the reader to visualize the text: “The railings were jammed tight with dark figures. I saw the firefly glow of the gentlemen’s seegars. I imagine I saw diamonds within the ladies’ flowing cloaks, and emeralds in their hair.” He also mixes an effective cocktail of fiction and fact that blur the line between the imagination and reality:

   “’We drove ‘em back through the woods, past their cap. I’d lost my musket by then. It never would fire. When we fell to looting the camp, Grant made us torch the place to learn us not to steal. The smoke drew Polk’s fire from across on the Kentucky side. That’s when I lost this.’ He touched his sleeve.”

Through authenticity and honesty, Peck drives home the fact that each life connects with the other, and that the actions of one can have a lifelong affect on many. In the final chapter, Peck hands the narration back to Howard Hutchings.  Howard has absorbed the stories told by an aging Tilly.  He is left reeling with pride when it is revealed that his true grandmother is not Tilly afterall, but is the beautiful Southern Belle who fatefully exited the Rob Roy so many years ago.  Howard realizes that Delphine and Calinda's arrival has also transformed his own life: "I was older now too, a lot older than when this trip began, older and looking ahead."

Review Excerpts
2004 Scott O’Dell Award for Historical Fiction
USA Today: “The book is rich in detail about life along the Mississippi and the limited, late war news that further splits communities.”
The Washington Post: “This unusual Civil War novel really boosts Peck’s credentials as
America’s best living author for young adults.”

Connections
*This would be a superb choice for required reading (ages 12 and up).
*Could be used to help construct meaning of the Civil War in a history class.
*Audio version available, ISBN 9780307282507

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