Philadelphia, U.S.A. 1838. Like America, the Krieger companies are clawing their way back from the Panic of 1837. Fourteen-year-old Rian Krieger knows this because she starts every workday as her father's bookkeeper and the money is flowing in. When the accounting is up to date, Rian scoots to her real love: the production floor of Krieger Locomotive.
To Rian, idleness equals bad, but not in a "rich people are industrious and the poor are idle" sort of way. If Rian doesn't immerse herself in a task that demands total concentration-bookkeeping, drawing a new part for a locomotive, pouring molten iron into a mold, caulking a boiler-dark thoughts gnaw their way loose like rats escaping from a burlap bag. You are The Oddity: The girl who hates girly-girl things. The girl who wears boys' clothing. The girl who intends to run Krieger Locomotive someday. Then an exploding steam engine puts Rian's plan in jeopardy and makes way for a host of new rat-thoughts.
Rian's father, Otto, bets everything-factories, home, reputation-on his assumption that the railroad industry will lead America out of the depression. He has to be successful, for if he doesn't build a fortune, how else will his daughter marry well?
And in South Carolina, Olivia Tucker, the daughter of plantation owners, rebels against her destiny: a life of privilege built on the backs of the enslaved. Olivia enlists Rian in a long-distance conspiracy to burn the daily cruelties of the South's slave system into the American consciousness.
About the Author :
Roger A. Smith has always been fascinated by railroads, canals, the antebellum era, and social justice issues. He naturally gravitated to his first career as a high school history teacher. After ten years of inspiring young people, he yielded to passions for which he had no formal training: co-owning a summer camp, farming, founding a participatory science museum, co-owning a wilderness expedition program for teenagers, teaching entrepreneurship at the college level, woodworking, and leading a rural arts organization. As an author, he draws lore and wisdom from all those professions, and joy from the thought that he is once again making history come alive to his constituents.Rog and his wife lived and worked on a farm in Central Pennsylvania for 41 years. They currently reside in Massachusetts with their Great Dane and 2 cats. They have three adult children and two grandchildren. Learn more at RogerASmith.com.
Review :
"If you think today's world is complicated for an adolescent, try going back to the 1830s and being a girl pretending to be a boy; a coachman who also becomes a companion to Tsar Nicholas I's ten-year-old son. The Blackmailer, Book 3 of Rian Krieger's Journey, takes us on a wild ride through Russian history and winds its way to 1938 Philadelphia and The Abolitionist Movement. Roger A. Smith is a master at integrating history and fiction in this fast-paced, enjoyable, and informative series!"-Kathy Aspden, Multicultural fiction novelist, author of The Mala Beads and The Irishman Series.