This month’s girls’ book club selection was one I’ve had for years: about twenty years, in fact. We read A Family Apart by Joan Lowry Nixon, the first in the Orphan Train Adventure series.
The story opens in New York City with an Irish family whose father has died. Ma is trying hard to keep everyone fed and clothed, but when one of the boys makes a poor choice, she gives them all to Reverend Brace-Loring, who sends them west on the Orphan Train for new homes and better lives. A Family Apart is about the adventures of Frances, the oldest sister in the family, as she struggles to adjust to life on a Midwestern farm.
Frances encounters an abundance of food not found in her New York tenement, and so we baked one of those dishes: an apple pie. We used Grandma’s recipe and made it just as she taught me – which is how her grandma taught her. Counting back all those years, that puts this recipe originating at about the same time as when Frances enjoyed it!
None of the girls had ever peeled an apple before, so that was our first adventure. It took some practice to get it right, but they soon conquered the piles of apples we needed.
After mixing up the crust, they took turns rolling it out and assembling the pies.
Doesn’t it look yummy?
Next we went outside to write letters to Frances’ Ma. Throughout the book, Frances is angry with her mother for ending her west, and the theme of sacrifice is discussed from many angles. The girls pretended to be Frances at the end of the story, when she has gained some understanding of this difficult concept, and wrote to Ma to explain.
Frances had a lot going on in the story, though, and missing her mother didn’t top the list. She had to learn how to live on the frontier, and for a city girl, that was difficult. One of her new chores was to milk the family cow.
The girls practiced on these gloves. They raced to see who could milk their ‘gloves’ fastest.
Then, since one of the early chores was to then carry the milk, the girls grabbed the handles of their ‘pails’ and ran it around the yard, trying not to spill any of their milk.
We also talked about the Pony Express and how it worked. To simulate that, the girls donned messenger bags, straddled bamboo poles, and formed teams to compete in a relay race, Pony Express style.
By the time they had done all of that, the pies were out of the oven and ready to eat.
It didn’t last long, though – the girls devoured that pie!
We had lots of fun celebrating A Family Apart. There are many more threads to tug if you choose to read this book. I’d love to hear what you choose to do!
What are your thoughts?