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Summary
Summary
Convicted of thievery and transported from England to America, Oliver Cromwell Pitts, shackled to his fellow prisoners, endures inedible food, filthy conditions, and deadly storms on his voyage across the Atlantic. But the hazardous shipboard journey is nothing compared to the peril that waits for him on the colonial shores.
In Annapolis, Oliver's indentured servitude is purchased by the foul, miserly Fitzhugh, who may have murdered another servant. On Fitzhugh's isolated tobacco farm, Oliver's only companion is an enslaved boy named Bara. Oliver and Bara become fast friends with one powerful goal: to escape Fitzhugh. Oliver hopes he can find his sister, Charity, brought somewhere in the colonies on a different ship. Bara dreams of reaching a community of free black people in the cypress swamp who may help him gain his liberty. But first the boys must flee Fitzhugh's plantation and outrun their brutal pursuer and the dangers that lurk in the swamp.
Author Notes
Avi is the author of the Newbery Medal novel Crispin: The Cross of Lead and the Newbery Honor books Nothing but the Truth and The True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle , among many other books for young readers. He lives in Colorado with his wife, an inventor. You can visit him online at www.avi-writer.com.
Reviews (3)
Horn Book Review
In 1725, twelve-year-old Oliver is sentenced to seven years of indentured servitude in the American colonies. His cruel master instills fear in Oliver and his new friend Bara, an enslaved African boy, causing them to flee into the swamp. This sequel to The Unexpected Life of Oliver Cromwell Pitts is again replete with Dickensian incident, and narrator Oliver presents a vivid picture of colonial life. (c) Copyright 2019. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Kirkus Review
Twelve-year-old convicted felon Oliver is transported to the American Colonies to avoid the hangman's noose, but he finds his situation as an enslaved felon there is nearly as deadly in this sequel to The Unexpected Life of Oliver Cromwell Pitts (2017).In London in the early 18th century, children and adults alike face harsh punishment for minor crimes. Rather than face death, many are offered a term of servitude in the New World. Those who can survive the trans-Atlantic crossing, with its cramped spaces, filthy conditions, and sparse rations, face harsh treatment at the hands of ruthless masters. In Maryland, Oliver is purchased by a cruel man who refuses him even basic necessities. Once on the plantation, Oliver meets Bara, an enslaved boy from Guinea, who teaches him to cultivate tobacco and how to avoid dying at the hands of their master. While freedom is always at the forefront of Oliver's mind, he also longs to reunite with his sister, Charity, also sold into servitude. Told in appropriately 18th-century diction, Oliver's picaresque is a harrowing page-turner that takes an unflinching look at what life was like for those living in servitude in the American Colonies. Oliver is quietly heroic but also realistic as he endures his fate. African Bara, though seen through white Oliver's eyes, is given trope-defying agency, his intelligence and superior knowledge of the territory and customs putting him in the lead but never at Oliver's service. Brief backmatter gives historical context to this sequel.Action-packed and inspirationalanother stunner. (Historical fiction. 8-12) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Review
*Starred Review* No, it's not the end of the world, though it might be the end of Oliver Cromwell Pitts, the plucky protagonist of Avi's earlier novel The Unexpected Life of Oliver Cromwell Pitts (2017), who returns in this splendid sequel. The year is 1725, and 12-year-old Oliver, a convicted felon, is being transported to the Colonies, where he will be sold into de facto slavery, which means seven years of forced labor. Sure enough, he is bought by a vile man named Fitzhugh, who takes Oliver to slave in his tobacco fields. There he meets Fitzhugh's true slave, a boy only slightly older than Oliver named Bara. The two boys bond and plot their escape from their odious master. Their careful plans are dashed by unfortunate circumstances, and they must flee for their lives into a nearby swamp. Can they survive its dangers and find their freedom? Time and Avi will tell. Though darker than its predecessor, this sequel is equally fine. The plotting is altogether laudable, the setting beautifully realized, and the characters highly empathetic. Especially good is the voice Avi has conjured for Oliver, just antique enough to evoke eighteenth-century diction and syntax. One thing is certain: Avi may call this the end of the world, but there is no end to the pleasure his latest evokes.--Michael Cart Copyright 2018 Booklist