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The Tramp Room

By Nancy-Lou Patterson
Subjects Fiction
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Paperback : 9780889203297, 160 pages, November 1998
Ebook (EPUB) : 9781554587643, 160 pages, October 2009

Table of contents

Table of Contents for The Tramp Room by Nancy-Lou Patterson
Chapter One: St. Nicholas Eve
Chapter Two: The Tramp Boy
Chapter Three: Visitors
Chapter Four: Flax Breaking
Chapter Five: The Bushlot
Chapter Six: Sausage Making
Chapter Seven: The Lamb’s Table
Chapter Eight: A Snowstorm
Chapter Nine: Goose Quills
Chapter Ten: Candle Making
Chapter Eleven: The Spinning Room
Chapter Twelve: Peace Cookies
Chapter Thirteen: More Visitors
Chapter Fourteen: Christkindl
Chapter Fifteen: St. Nicholas Day

Description

A young girl falls asleep in the Joseph Schneider Haus and wakes up in the 1850s. At the same time, a tramp boy seeks sanctuary from a cruel master. Caught in the past, the young girl, Elizabeth Salisbury, is thrust into the drama of the tramp boy’s struggle to remain free.

Reviews

In The Tramp Room, with great skill and tenderness, Nancy-Lou Patterson takes us on a magical life-affirming journey into mid-nineteenth century life at Kitchener's Joseph Schneider Haus. Here we are witness to the unfolding of a fascinating and spiritually rewarding story set against a backdrop of the beautiful simplicity and hard work that made up the daily lives of the Mennonites in the period. The latest in her series of young adult novels, The Tramp Room celebrates the rituals that inform the most ordinary activities from cookie cutting to flax breaking as well as the beauty and artistry at the heart of everyday objects. An extremely moving and enriching experience, this book will enchant readers of all ages.

- Jane Urquhart

This neat little novel by contributing editor Nancy-Lou Patterson is historical fiction with the emphasis on the historical. It is set in the 19th century in a Mennonite home in Ontario, Canada....The point that most struck me was the very difference in the tone of life. There were no bored children complaining about not being able to make it to Disneyland....This is a world without short cuts and time-saving devices, in which time is neither frantically lost, nor squandered in ennui. In the end Patterson uses George MacDonald's favorite Novalis quote, but it is not vital to a story which is more in the tradition of Katherine Paterson than Lewis or MacDonald. Still, if one is willing to time travel, this sweet little story brings spiritual lessons all its own.

- James Prothero, The Lamp-Post