This coming-of-age novel, published in 1943, is set in rural Kentucky in the early twentieth century. It is inspired by her own upbringing in the northeast of the state. The central character, Fern Barrie, the eldest daughter of her family, has no desire to choose either of the options her mother has in mind for her adult life: housewife or teacher. When her father decides to set up a store for the local community in competition with a store that was trading unfairly, she wants to be involved in running it. She is at the forefront of building up the business while wisely handling the conflict with the hot-headed, gun-toting owner of the rival store.
The author, Rebecca Caudill (born 2 February 1899) grew up in Harlan County in northeast Kentucky. She studied at Wesleyan College in Macon, Georgia and afterwards began work as a high-school teacher. She lived most of her adult life in Urbana, Illinois. Her first book (this one) was published in 1943. Her 1949 novel Tree of Freedom, about the War of Independence, was shortlisted for the Newberry Award, while A Pocketful of Cricket was shortlisted for the Caldecott Medal in 1964. She wrote 18 books for children and several works of non-fiction, including the memoir My Appalachia. There is an annual young readers book award in Illinois named in her honour.
The later chapters of the novel are mostly concerned with the local rivalry surrounding the election (see the illustration above). The central character belongs to one of very few Democrat families in the community. He faces threats to his life from hotheaded Republicans but maintains a pacifist stance:
“I put no trust in guns... An honest education's the only defense a democracy needs, or can rightfully use, for that matter.” The author recalled in her memoir the election day atmosphere of her childhood:
“drinking,
quarrelling, shooting, feuding, and generally disturbing the peace”.
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