Tag Archives: Connecticut

Cover of The Moffats by Eleanor Estes, illustration of four children

Rereading The Moffats by Eleanor Estes

(You can listen to this episode here.)

We had completely forgotten about Eleanor Estes’s The Moffats until a friend suggested that we reread it. Published in 1941, it’s the first in a series about four children growing up in small-town Connecticut in the 1910s. Both of us could relate to Jane, Estes’s anxious and bookish autobiographical stand-in.

Mentioned on this episode:

Other books in the series:

The Middle Moffat (1942), a Newbery Honor Book

Rufus M. (1943), a Newbery Honor Book

The Moffat Museum (1983)

Other books by Estes:

The Hundred Dresses (1944), a Newbery Honor Book

Ginger Pye (1951), winner of the 1952 Newbery Medal

Pinky Pye (1958)

Also mentioned:

Many Moons (1943) by James Thurber, with illustrations by Louis Slobodkin, winner of the Caldecott Prize

“The Little Match Girl” by Hans Christian Andersen

“Eleanor Estes: Chronicler of the Family Story,” by Claudia Mills, on the UConn Archives and Special Collections Blog. (This is the website with the story about pioneering children’s librarian Annie Carroll Moore, who was Estes’s boss, disparaging The Moffats after reading the manuscript.)

“Celebrating Children’s Books Week–and a pioneering children’s librarian,” on Mary Grace’s blog, My Life 100 Years Ago

Recommended by Deborah: The Saturdays by Elizabeth Enright; Beverly Cleary’s books

Recommended by Mary Grace: The All-of-a-Kind Family series by Sydney Taylor

Other Rereading Our Childhood episodes:

Rereading The Young Unicorns by Madeleine L’Engle

Rereading Ramona the Pest by Beverly Cleary

Rereading Stuart Little by E.B. White

Rereading Charlotte’s Web by E.B. White

The podcast is hosted by Buzzsprout at rereadingourchildhood.buzzsprout.com and is available on SpotifyApple Podcasts, and other platforms.

You can find Deborah at deborahkalb.com and Mary Grace at My Life 100 Years Ago.

This episode was edited by Adam Linder of Bespoken Podcasting.

Rereading The Witch of Blackbird Pond by Elizabeth George Speare

(We’ve been publishing episodes regularly but have gotten behind on the website, so we’re catching up. This episode was published on October 17. It was our Halloween episode but, with its colonial American setting, it makes a good Thanksgiving episode as well. You can listen to it here.)

In this episode, Mary Grace and Deborah discuss Elizabeth George Speare’s 1958 Newbery Medal winner The Witch of Blackbird Pond, about a girl, Kit, who’s struggling to fit in in a Puritan community in colonial Connecticut.

Mentioned in this episode:

The Crucible, Arthur Miller’s 1953 play about the Salem witch trials, which was a commentary on McCarthyism.

Little Women by Louisa May Alcott. Kit’s cousin Mercy has Beth-like qualities.

Kit’s childhood reading includes The Pilgrim’s Progress and The Tempest.

The Bronze Bow, Speare’s 1962 Newbery Medal winner about a Jewish boy living at the time of Christ who converts to Christianity.

Calico Captive, Speare’s first novel, published in 1957, based on a real-life story about a girl who was captured by Native Americans in 1794 and taken to Canada.

The Sign of the Beaver, Speare’s 1983 Newbery Honor book about a boy struggling to live on his own in eighteenth-century Maine.

Calico Bush, Rachel Lyman Field’s 1931 novel about a French girl who works as an indentured servant in colonial Maine.

Speare’s 1989 Laura Ingalls Wilder Award citation.

Commentary on thestorygraph.com by a contributor using the name books_n_pickles who talks about the “love hexagon” in the book.

Goodreads reviews of The Witch of Blackbird Pond.

Recommended for fans of The Witch of Blackbird Pond: Johnny Tremain by Esther Forbes (Deborah), Nightbirds on Nantucket by Joan Aiken (Mary Grace).

Other episodes mentioned:

Rereading Black Hearts in Battersea by Joan Aiken

Rereading Caddie Woodlawn by Carol Ryrie Brink

The podcast is hosted by Buzzsprout at rereadingourchildhood.buzzsprout.com and is available on SpotifyApple Podcasts, and other platforms.

You can find Deborah’s author interviews on her blog, Books Q&A by Deborah Kalb, and Mary Grace’s adventures in the 1920s on her blog, My Life 100 Years Ago.

This episode was edited by Adam Linder of Bespoken Podcasting.