Cheryl Rainfield: Teen Fiction Author, Reviewer, & Book-a-holic
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Hans Brinker or The Silver Skates
by Mary Mapes Dodge
   
Hans Brinkel and his sister Gretel are so poor that they must skate across the canal in Holland using crude wooden skates that Hans made, while other children around them have steel-bladed skates. Hans and Gretel both skate well, but still they can't enter the yearly race--The Silver Skates--that everyone looks forward to; their wooden skates stuck to the ice, while the rich children can go much faster just because of their skates. Not only are the sister and brother poor, but they are also friendless, and must face fear and pain when their father is wounded in the head. Then they get a chance....
Together, they face hunger, hardship, and fear, and struggle to help each other through hard times and good times.


Read an Excerpt...

On a bright December morning long ago, two thinly clad children were kneeling upon the bank of a frozen canal in Holland.

The sun had not yet appeared, but the gray sky was parted near the horizon, and its edges shone crimson with the coming day. Most of the good Hollanders were enjoying a placid morning nap. Even Mynheer von Stoppelnoze, that worthy old Dutchman, was still slumbering "in beautiful repose".

Now and then some peasant woman, poising a well-filled basket upon her head, came skimming over the glassy surface of the canal; or a lusty boy, skating to his day's work in the town, cast a good-natured grimace toward the shivering pair as he flew along.

Meanwhile, with many a vigorous puff and pull, the brother and sister, for such they were, seemed to be fastening something to their feet--not skates, certainly, but clumsy pieces of wood narrowed and smoothed at their lower edge, and pierced with holes, through which were threaded strings of rawhide.

These queer-looking affairs had been made by the boy Hans. His mother was a poor peasant woman, too poor even to think of such a thing as buying skates for her little ones. Rough as these were, they had afforded the children many a happy hour upon the ice. And now, as with cold, red fingers our young Hollanders tugged at the strings--their solemn faces bending closely over their knees--no vision of impossible iron runners came to dull the satisfaction glowing within.

In a moment the boy arose and, with a pompous swing of the arms and a careless "Come on, Gretel," glided easily across the canal.

"Ah, Hans," called his sister plaintively, "this foot is not well yet. The strings hurt me on last market day, and now I cannot bear them tied in the same place."

"Tie them higher up, then," answered Hans, as without looking at her he performed a wonderful cat's cradle step on the ice.

"How can I? The string is too short."



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