Listen free for 30 days
Listen with offer
-
A Buss from Lafayette
- Narrated by: Dorothea Jensen
- Length: 5 hrs and 15 mins
Failed to add items
Add to basket failed.
Add to wishlist failed.
Remove from wishlist failed.
Adding to library failed
Follow podcast failed
Unfollow podcast failed
£0.00 for first 30 days
Buy Now for £14.99
No valid payment method on file.
We are sorry. We are not allowed to sell this product with the selected payment method
Summary
Sometimes one little kiss can change everything, especially one from a world famous hero of the American Revolution!
- Gold Medalist (Middle School/Historical Fiction), 2017 Literary Classics Award
- 1st Place Winner (Historical Fiction), 2017 Purple Dragonfly Book Awards
- Bronze Medalist (Juvenile/Young Adult Fiction), 2017 eLit Awards
- Quarter Finalist, 2016 Booklife Prize (Middle Grade) One of the top 10 MG entries!
- Seal of Approval Recipient, 2017 Literary Classics Awards
- Finalist (Young Adult), Book Excellence Awards
- Named on the Grateful American Kids website as one of the best history books for kids to read
Fourteen-year-old Clara Hargraves lives on a farm in Hopkinton, a small New Hampshire town, during the early 19th century. She has a couple of big problems. First of all, she has a stepmother Priscilla, who used to be her spinster schoolmistress aunt. Clara resents that her late mother's older sister has not only married her father but is about to have a baby. To make matters worse, "Prissy Priscilla" keeps trying to make the rambunctious, clever, and witty Clara act like a proper young lady. Secondly, Clara has red hair, making her a target for teasing by a handsome older boy, Dickon Weeks, and by her pretty 17-year-old "Dread Cousin Hetty". Clara, however, has a secret plan she hopes will change this.
During the last week of June, 1825, Clara's town is abuzz because the famous General Lafayette is about to visit their state during his farewell tour of America. In those eventful seven days, Clara learns a lot about her family, Hetty, Dickon, herself, and about Lafayette. She comes to understand the huge and vital role the young French aristocrat played in America's Revolutionary War and to see that her problems might not be quite so terrible after all.