ALA Booklist
(Wed Jul 06 00:00:00 CDT 2022)
For the past several years, 11-year-old Elsie has gone to stay with her grandparents on Honey Island in the middle of the Okefenokee Swamp. Elsie loves everything about the swamp, so this summer, she writes a letter to President Franklin D. Roosevelt, asking for his help in protecting it. When she arrives at Honey Island, she finds two surprises: a dog, which she names Huck, and her cousin Henry James, an aspiring preacher who's practicing on Elsie Mae. When the children and Huck get embroiled in a local mystery, Elsie Mae learns that a sacrifice is sometimes required in order to save something important. While this historical fiction novel isn't strictly accurate R did protect the swamp, though it wasn't over the course of one summer or inspired by a girl's letter e period details, unusual setting, light dialect, well-developed characters, and the affirming, gradual progression of Elsie Mae and Henry James' friendship makes for an engrossing story. An author's note offers more insight into the real story of FDR's protection of the swamp.
Kirkus Reviews
(Wed Jul 06 00:00:00 CDT 2022)
Eleven-year-old Elsie Mae lives for her summers spent with her grandparents on Honey Island in the Okefenokee Swamp—so when the swamp is threatened by a developer, she decides to do something to save the most beautiful place on Earth. The canal project is only part of the drama in this Depression-era tale. A hog thief, a Bible-thumping cousin, and a dog that cannot seem to stay out of trouble all conspire to make this the most exciting and problem-filled summer ever. But Elsie Mae is so focused on making a name for herself that she neglects to consider how her actions will affect those around her. She seems to create more problems than she solves. Is this the fall her cousin warned would follow her pride? Or are the complications really just blessings in disguise? Gators, huckleberry pie, and sweet tea on the porch are all part of the swamper way of life. Elsie Mae is spunky, headstrong, and kind, but she also has moments of jealousy and recklessness. The mystery surrounding the hog thefts falls flat, but the distinctive setting, the intriguing characters, and the glimpse at a culture that is unfamiliar to most are enough to carry it through. Elsie Mae narrates, and characters' dialogue is rendered in a broad dialect. Absence of racial markers implies that they are white. A historical note explains the actual events surrounding the Georgia swamp's protection. Swamp magic. (Historical fiction. 9-12)
School Library Journal
(Wed Jul 06 00:00:00 CDT 2022)
Gr 4-6How can one person make a difference in the world? Should they watch, listen, and learn, or shout the truth at the top of their lungs? For Elsie Mae, the youngest in her family, doing "something big and important in the world" is going to involve speaking up. Elsie Mae comes from swamp people, and unlike her parents and siblings, she is most at home deep in the Okefenokee, where her grandparents and uncles pursue a traditional swamper lifehunting, fishing and living off the land and the watera life that is now threatened by the development plans of a shipping company. As Elsie Mae prepares to spend the summer with her grandparents, she sends a letter to President Theodore Roosevelt, begging him to protect the unique environment of her home. Her wish comes true, with the help of her bible-thumping nuisance of a cousin Henry James, her capable uncles, some reporters, some hog thieves, and a nosy bloodhound named Huck. But will saving the swamp mean losing the swampers' way of life? Cavanagh's sweet and engaging historical fiction style perfectly captures the special quality of life in the Okefenokee, from 'gators to biscuits to good neighbors. Elsie Mae is a strong, complicated heroine, surrounded by complex characters. The novel also does a good job highlighting the complications of federal conservation for those who live in and use a wild place. Cavanagh collapses the time line (the book takes place in 1933, the Okefenokee wasn't protected until 1937), and fictionalizes the order of events, which will frustrate some readers, but an author's note appended to the story makes these choices clear. VERDICT Recommended for fans of historical fiction, nature, and determined young heroes. A great read to pair with J.E. Thompson's The Girl From Felony Bay.Katya Schapiro, Brooklyn Public Library