The Traitor: Golden Mountain Chronicles: 1885
The Traitor: Golden Mountain Chronicles: 1885
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HarperCollins
Just the Series: Golden Mountain Chronicles   

Series and Publisher: Golden Mountain Chronicles   

Annotation: In 1885, a lonely illegitimate American boy and a lonely Chinese-American boy develop an unlikely friendship in the midst of prejudices and racial tension in their coal mining town of Rock Springs, Wyoming.
 
Reviews: 10
Catalog Number: #304979
Format: Perma-Bound Edition
Special Formats: Inventory Sale Inventory Sale
Common Core/STEAM: Common Core Common Core
Publisher: HarperCollins
Copyright Date: 2003
Edition Date: 2004 Release Date: 11/01/04
Pages: 310 p.
ISBN: Publisher: 0-06-000831-8 Perma-Bound: 0-605-38687-0
ISBN 13: Publisher: 978-0-06-000831-4 Perma-Bound: 978-0-605-38687-7
Dewey: Fic
LCCN: 2002022534
Dimensions: 20 cm.
Language: English
Reviews:
Horn Book (Fri Aug 01 00:00:00 CDT 2003)

The lives of two boys, old beyond their twelve years, intertwine in this saga of ugly events in the Wyoming Territory. This novel focuses on the 1885 race riot in which white coal miners massacred the Chinese workers favored by the mine owner. The well-drawn history is fascinating; a subplot is intriguing; and the plight of the boys as outsiders will appeal to readers. A historical note and a series overview are appended. Bib.

School Library Journal

Gr 6-9-This novel, based on a true event, tells the story of two young teens who live in Rock Springs, WY, in 1885 when animosity between American and Chinese miners reaches its peak. Born in the U.S. of Chinese parents, Joseph Young considers himself an American, but both communities see him as only Chinese. Michael Purdy is an "outsider" because of his illegitimate birth. The boys meet when Michael escapes hounding by bullies and hides in a cave outside of town where Joseph is fossil hunting. In chapters that alternate between the two well-developed characters, the book describes their growing friendship despite the escalating trouble between the Chinese and the "Westerners" who blame the newcomers for their economic hardships and march on Chinatown in a rampage. Though the narrative leading up to the massacre and its aftermath is perhaps a bit too long, Yep does a good job portraying the rampant prejudice, and he does not sugarcoat the horrifying violence, told from Michael's point of view. In stark contrast to the inhumanity he sees in the streets, his mother acts humanely in spite of her negative view of the Chinese. This series entry adds another chapter to the tale of the Young family, who came to America from Kwangtung, China, and sheds needed light on a shameful, but forgotten, event in American history.-Barbara Scotto, Michael Driscoll School, Brookline, MA Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

ALA Booklist (Wed Jan 01 00:00:00 CST 2003)

Dual voices in alternating chapters narrate the conflict between Chinese and Western coal miners in the Wyoming Territory in 1885. Joseph Young, American by birth but Chinese in heritage, lives with his ostracized father in a mining camp; Michael Purdy, who lives in the nearby town with his unmarried mother, is an outsider because he is a bastard. The boys accidentally meet in a cave filled with fossils and become friends. When the railroad sets out to replace the Western miners with Chinese workers, hatred and resentment explodes in a massacre of the Chinese. The overlong novel has an obvious message, but the short chapters read quickly, and readers will become involved through the first-person voices that capture each boy's feelings of being an outsider and a traitor. An afterword documents the history and a concluding chapter outlines the Golden Mountain Chronicles, noting that the ninth and final is yet to come. This story of prejudice can stand alone, but it will certainly lead readers back to other titles in the series, which reflect Chinese experiences in China and America from 1849-1995.

Kirkus Reviews

Yep lays down another course of his now monumental, seven-generation family chronicle begun in Dragonwings (1975) with this tale of two Wyoming Territory outsiders—one an illegitimate white child, the other a US-born son of a Chinese coal miner—who witness the Rock Springs massacre, one of the most savage race riots in our history. In alternating chapters (and typefaces), Joseph Young, or "Precious Light" as his father insists on calling him, and Michael Purdy, the washerwoman's son, track rising tensions between the town's Chinese and non-Chinese residents, as they themselves forge a secret, uncertain alliance in a fossil-filled cave they dub Star Rock. As hostile confrontations and public rallies gradually escalate into an all-out, armed assault on the Chinese camp, Yep methodically exposes the ugliness of racial hatred, with characters on both sides justifying irrational stances fueled by fear, misdirected anger, malicious intentions, and misunderstanding. Star Rock isn't the only sign that better relations are possible, however, for to his astonishment, Michael finds his previously intolerant mother sheltering Joseph and his father from the general slaughter until they can flee—and the tale ends with both families about to re-connect in San Francisco. "You have the right dream," a wiser Joseph tells his father Otter (protagonist of Dragon's Gate [1993], and here a reviled, steadfastly pacifistic adult). "There just have to be more of us making that dream happen." Yep caps his strong, chilling story with a historical afterword, then maps out his saga's past and future episodes. Essential reading for all students of America's complex history and culture. (Fiction. 11-13)

Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)

Laurence Yep's Golden Mountain Chronicles-which traces the experiences of the Youngs, a Chinese family, over several generations in America (the publisher includes in the series Dragonwings, Dragon's Gate and Child of the Owl, among others)-continues with The Traitor, set in 1885 in Wyoming Territory. The narrative alternates between Joseph Young (""""I was thirteen in Chinese years. Twelve in Western"""") and his American counterpart, Michael Purdy, both of whom work in the mines.

Word Count: 59,922
Reading Level: 4.8
Interest Level: 5-9
Accelerated Reader: reading level: 4.8 / points: 9.0 / quiz: 66895 / grade: Middle Grades+
Reading Counts!: reading level:5.6 / points:14.0 / quiz:Q33157
Lexile: 620L
Guided Reading Level: V
Fountas & Pinnell: V
The Traitor
Golden Mountain Chronicles: 1885

Chapter One

Joseph Young
Chinese Camp, Wyoming Territory
Sunday, June 14, 1885

Father began the morning with his usual fight.

I tried to cling to a few more minutes of sleep because it was Sunday, our one day of rest. I could hear the stranger taunting Father outside the cabin. Most Chinese did when they found out Father's identity.

"So you're the high-and-mighty Otter," the man was jeering. "What are you doing stuck here digging coal just like me?"

Father's voice was as friendly as ever. "I thought my days with a pickax were done when I left the railroad," he agreed. "But here I am again."

I kept to my bed, hoping that this time it would be different: Father would be able to make peace with the man.

"And where are all your American pals now?" the man sneered. "You told us they'd never let those laws pass."

"Those immigration laws passed only because of ignorance. My Western friends are fighting to overturn them right now," Father said to the man. "Westerners" was Father's polite word for Americans.

Calmly Father tried to assure the man that everything would work out for all of us eventually. He had such faith in America and in American justice. He never seemed to realize that his words, meant to soothe, only rubbed salt into old wounds. All the Chinese were frustrated with what was happening; but since they couldn't take it out on the Americans, they looked for other targets.

By now I was good at reading the tones and undercurrents of voices, so I knew that the man was getting ready to beat Father to a pulp.

With a sigh I unrolled my trousers, which I had been using as a pillow. Pulling them on, I rolled out of the bunk bed to save Father -- sometimes it was hard to say who was raising whom.

The sun was just rising, so I made my way quietly past the other bunks, where our cabinmates were still snoring. When I stepped outside, I didn't recognize the man. The coal company kept upping our quotas and bringing in more Chinese to work. There were always plenty of Chinese who kept coming to the Land of the Golden Mountain -- as they called America. And these guests -- as they called themselves -- were willing to do anything.

This guest was still plump with city fat. The coal mines would either slim him down or kill him. "I'm sick of your promises," he said, balling his hand into a fist.

Father just kept his hands at his sides, refusing to lift a hand to defend himself. As he said once, it was better for a Chinese to strike him than an American. He would get a beating if I didn't do something.

There was a small bench outside the cabin. Snatching it up, I brought it down hard on the newcomer's broad back; but he didn't fall down. He just stood there and gave a puzzled grunt. And suddenly he became all the ungrateful fools who had driven us from San Francisco's Chinatown and who still made my life so miserable here. So I brought the bench down on his head this time.

The newcomer had a skull as hard as stone. He gave a shake of his head and whirled around, raising an arm to protect himself.

So I crouched, swinging the bench at his knee. With a shout, he went down, clutching his leg.

I bent over, hitting the newcomer again. He thrashed and wallowed like a beached whale. Then the bench, always a little wobbly, finally broke into halves. I got ready to flail at the newcomer with a piece in either hand.

Father, though, pinned my arms against my sides. "That's enough. If he can't work today, he won't get paid."

He'd gotten flabby as an interpreter in San Francisco, but twelve- and even sixteen-hour shifts in the coal mines had restored his muscles. He said he was as strong now as when he worked on the railroads as a teenager. And he easily jerked me away.

Then he squatted over the newcomer. "Are you all right?"

I threw the pieces of bench away. As smart as Father was, he kept ignoring the truth. "Why do you care about him?"

Father gave me a reproachful look over his shoulder. "All Chinese are our brothers. Now please get some water." Then he helped the newcomer to sit up.

All the drinking water in the camps and in town had to be brought in by train. Though there was a creek, the water was so bad that you couldn't drink it. Going to the barrel, I took off the lid and picked up the dipper that hung from a nail.

On the surface of the water I saw my face floating against the sky. My jaw was square like Father's, but my eyes were small with sharp folds at the corners like Mother's. In San Francisco I had been careful to keep the hair shaved from the crown of my head; but here I'd let it grow out like many of the other miners. My skin was darker than theirs because I spent more time walking in the open.

Then my reflection disappeared as I lowered the dipper in and brought it over to the newcomer.

Sulking, the newcomer knocked it aside. "Get away from me," he mumbled. He looked a little wobbly as he rose, but he stumbled back to his cabin somehow.

Father tried to hide his hurt by making a joke. "Well, there's nothing like a brisk morning workout to get my appetite up. I hope White Deer will be cooking up something good."

The Traitor
Golden Mountain Chronicles: 1885
. Copyright © by Laurence Yep. Reprinted by permission of HarperCollins Publishers, Inc. All rights reserved. Available now wherever books are sold.

Excerpted from The Traitor by Laurence Yep
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.

In the Wyoming territory in 1885, life is tough, especially for Michael Purdy. An outcast in the small town of Rock Springs, he's either bullied and bloodied, or ignored. Michael feels he might as well be a ghost in this rough coal-mining town.

But life is even harder for Joseph Young, a Chinese American boy and Michael's secret ally. Despised by the white miners, the Chinese work in dangerous conditions, struggling against poverty and racism. Still, Joseph yearns to be a "real American" -- a dream his father and the other Chinese laborers can't understand.

When the town's growing resentment toward the Chinese explodes, Michael and Joseph must test their unlikely friendship and trust each other with their lives.


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