Walk On Earth A Stranger – Rae Carson
Lee Westfall has a strong, loving family. She has a home she loves and a loyal steed. She has a best friend—who might want to be something more.
She also has a secret.
Lee can sense gold in the world around her. Veins deep in the earth. Small nuggets in a stream. Even gold dust caught underneath a fingernail. She has kept her family safe and able to buy provisions, even through the harshest winters. But what would someone do to control a girl with that kind of power? A person might murder for it.
When everything Lee holds dear is ripped away, she flees west to California—where gold has just been discovered. Perhaps this will be the one place a magical girl can be herself. If she survives the journey.
Review: I think this is a case of “It’s not you, it’s me.”
When I was a
kid/young teen, I went through a multi-year obsession with survival stories. I
pretty much only read nonfiction about people (usually historical people) who
survived crazy wilderness situations. The California and Yukon gold rushes were
probably my second-biggest wilderness passion. Arctic exploration was definitely
my deadly-story first love, but I read a
lot of gold rush nonfiction. If a book promised that someone was going to
die horrifically in the wild, young me was all over it.
So, what does
this have to do with Walk on Earth a
Stranger? Well, this novel is set in gold-rush-era America and focuses on a
teen girl named Leah. She has a secret: She can sense gold. She uses her power
to make her family rich. This attracts the attention of some unsavory people.
After Leah is forced to flee from her home, she decides to head west with her
kind-of-sort-of boyfriend. Gold has recently been discovered in California, and
she knows that she’ll be able to find enough of it to make a new life for
herself. Her biggest challenge will be surviving the trip from Georgia to
California.
“‘Only way to reach the green grass of Oregon or the sweet gold of California is through hell itself.’” –Walk on Earth a Stranger
I didn’t like
this book as much as I expected I would. I know that I burned myself out on
gold rush stories when I was younger, but I thought that Leah’s gold-sensing
magic would add a new twist to a familiar tale. Unfortunately, the magic is
barely present in this book. Hundreds of pages go by without it even being
mentioned. The book is marketed as fantasy, but it feels a lot more like
historical fiction, which would usually be fine with me because I love
historical books. My issue is that this book doesn’t bring anything new to the
historical fiction genre. I found Leah’s journey to California to be painfully
slow and highly predictable. I felt like I spent the entire book waiting for
something big to happen, and nothing ever did.
I also wasn’t
feeling Leah’s love interest. Jefferson seems to spend most of his time
sulking. I understand why he’s unhappy—he’s often near-death and has to deal with
racist idiots on top of it—but I started to wonder what Leah sees in him. He
doesn’t have a lot going on in the personality department.
There are some elements
of the book that I love. Leah is a badass woman. I really like her. She’s loyal
and quick-thinking, and nothing is going to stop her from getting to
California. She’s confident in her body but not unrealistically beautiful,
which is rare for a YA heroine.
“I have a strange life; I know it well. We have a big homestead and not enough working hands, so I’m the girl who hunts and farms and pans for gold because her daddy never had sons. I’m forever weary, my hands roughed and cracked, my skirts worn too thin too soon. The town girls poke fun at me, calling me ‘Plain Lee’ on account of my strong hands and my strong jaw.” – Walk on Earth a Stranger
The book discusses a lot of interesting gender issues. For part of the
story, Leah is forced to dress as a boy, “Lee,” because she needs money. The
author does an impressive job of showing the differences in the ways that Lee
and Leah are treated. Even though they are the same person, Lee gets all of the
advantages that society has to offer. Leah is treated like property.
“‘Men can be relentless,’ she agrees, ‘when they think a woman belongs to them.’” - Walk on Earth a Stranger
This book does have some positive aspects, and I was entertained by
parts of it, but I probably won’t continue with the series. It just didn’t
offer much that I haven’t seen before.
Have you ever read Adrift? It's about a guy whose sailboat was wrecked and he had to survive at sea for a crazy long time! Anyway... I've been wanting to read this book forever, but I wasn't quite sure if I'd enjoy it. The gold rush thing doesn't really sound like my thing. Great review!
ReplyDeleteTracy @ Cornerfolds
Thanks! I’ve heard of Adrift and know a little about it. I haven’t read it, though. So many books, so little time!
DeleteAj @ Read All The Things!
A LOT of people were letdown by the lack of magic here. I mean, if you give a character a unique ability like being able to sense gold, you'd expect it to be a present aspect of the story throughout. I have yet to read this myself though I do own a copy. Now I'm eager to see how our feelings about it will compare. Great review^^
ReplyDeleteThis seems like one of those books that people either loved or were bored with. I haven't been able to decide which way I think I'll go, so I've avoided it for now. Waiting to see what people think of the next book.
ReplyDeleteNicole @ Feed Your Fiction Addiction