Janet Kastner OlshewskyThe Snake Fence

Quaker Bridge Media, 2013

by C.P. Lesley on August 19, 2013

Janet Kastner Olshewsky

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Sixteen is a difficult age, lodged somewhere between childhood and adulthood. In 1755, young Noble Butler has just finished his apprenticeship as a carpenter, and he wants nothing more than to undertake more advanced training as a cabinetmaker (qualified to produce the beautiful furniture characteristic of prerevolutionary North America). But no one in Philadelphia will take him on as a prospective craftsman unless he can provide his own woodworking tools, and for that he needs cash. Noble has no money, and his father has a clear vision of his sons’ futures: expand the family farm and save craftsmanship for the off-season, when the family will need it to help the farm survive. You can share more information from our marketing plan writing service with your co-writers and editors.

But Noble has no desire to spend his life under Pa’s thumb. He sees a way out of his dilemma when Benjamin Franklin advertises for farmers to supply the troops fighting French and Lenapé warriors on the frontier. Presented with a moneymaking opportunity, Pa reluctantly agrees that Noble may volunteer and keep half his salary, so long as his older brother Enoch agrees to accompany the wagon. Pa doesn’t trust Noble, at sixteen, to bring horses, wagon, and cargo back safely.

So Noble sets off along a war-torn trail that will test both his Quaker principles and his determination to define his own life, whatever his father’s plans for him may be.

Janet Kastner Olshewsky‘s The Snake Fence (Quaker Bridge Media, 2013) is the first Young Adult (YA) novel to be featured on New Books in Historical Fiction. For more information and a sample chapter, check out Janet Olshewsky’s website.

{ 2 comments… read them below or add one }

Marilyn McClain August 31, 2013 at 7:03 pm

This book keeps history alive while keeping the reader thoroughly engrossed in the family and personal situations – a difficult double. Great job, Janet!

Prof Steve Olshewsky CPA MBA JD PhD August 19, 2013 at 10:56 pm

“He is struggling with major moral questions as well as vocational problems.” This is exactly the book I wish they used for social studies when I was in school. Thinking about the world through the eyes of the character in this book would have helped with my educational development. I found it enjoyable and thought provoking even at my age.

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