Caleb's Crossing

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The new novel from Pulitzer Prize-winner Geraldine Brooks, author of the Richard and Judy bestseller 'March', 'Year of Wonders' and 'People of the Book'. Caleb's Crossing is inspired by the little known story of the first native American to graduate from Harvard College in 1665. Caleb, a Wampanoag from the island of Martha's Vineyard, seven miles off the coast of Massachusetts, grew up in the first generation of Indians to experience contact with English settlers. (The first English settled the island in 1641, to escape the brutal and doctrinaire Puritanism of the Massachusetts Bay colony.) The story is told through the eyes of Bethia, daughter of the English minister who educates Caleb in the Latin and Greek he needs in order to enter the college. As Caleb makes the crossing into white culture, Bethia, 14 years old at the novel's opening, finds herself pulled in the opposite direction. Trapped by the narrow strictures of her faith and her gender, she seeks connections with Caleb's world that will challenge her beliefs and set her at odds with her community.

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Caleb's Crossing was an incredible book. The storyline, told through the eyes of Bethia, guides the reader through an intense relationship and years of personal development between Bethia and Caleb. Geraldine describes the surrounding scenes and story in such a beautiful way that makes you smell the sea salt and feel the soft warm grass. It is well researched and will leave you pondering the lives of Bethia and Caleb long after you close the book. Definitely worth the read.

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