abby_can_read's review against another edition

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emotional

3.0

jessjess125's review against another edition

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adventurous emotional mysterious tense fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

5.0

baileyjohnk's review against another edition

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3.0

This story is so much more enthralling than the first one. I’m actually surprised they didn’t shy away from the darker sides of history considering it’s a children’s book. Very intense and exciting. Hopefully the next book fixes up that cliff hanger.

kknudsen3's review against another edition

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3.0

I think the thing that I liked best about the American Girl Dolls was that they came with their own stories. I started by getting the books, and then later my parents bought me the dolls.

katie_in_creativeland_'s review against another edition

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2.0

Great continuation to this series. The village get attaked by raiders who steal many of the horses. They also kidnapp Kaya and Speaking Rain. They end up working as slaves for the raiders where Kaya meets a fellow slave called two hawks. Kaya and Two Hawks escape together knowing it is the only way to cover more ground and get back home to her people in order to return and rescue Speaking Rain.

simplyparticular's review

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3.0

This review is from the perspective of a mother - Kaya's second book is overflowing of descriptions of the life of a captured Nez Perce girl among a rival tribe and survivalist techniques.

Kaya continues to be impetuous and focused more on animals than people. This puts her and her adopted sister in danger. The second half of the story is focused on Kaya's escape, with a decent amount of survival strategy, and an interesting look at the gender divide in her era.

Parts seem unrealistic for a 9 year old child, but the target age will enjoy the adventure. And for once, all did not wrap up perfectly - this is obviously a story arc that will continue.

piburnjones's review against another edition

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5.0

Reading for the first time as an adult, my first reaction is WHOA where is this series going, because this has serious "Saves the Day" energy.

Although, come to think of it, Meet Kaya has some "Learns a Lesson" vibes. At least, until you get to the beginning of this book and find that, well, maybe she hasn't yet.

I don't mean to be cranky that American Girl decided to ease away from their established patterns. There are good reasons for it - expanding beyond girls who celebrate Christmas is great - but I have always enjoyed how each series employs similar beats as a way of showing how girlhood, and people in general, stay the same despite the many changes each time period brings. So that's always something I'm looking for.

One way in which this one does feel like a "Learns a Lesson" story is that it expands Kaya's world, showing a little of nearby tribes - both enemies and allies - as well as giving us a sense of how broadly Kaya's family travels over the course of a year or so. She's at least somewhat familiar with a pretty large area, and she's well versed in herb lore and navigating by the stars.

The set-up that gets us there is... well you know it's going to happen if you read the cover of the book, so perhaps it's unfair to call it obvious. So of course Kaya is taken by raiders, along with Speaking Rain and (the raiders' main goal) a lot of horses, including Steps High.

(Tangent: I keep trying to type Singing Rain, presumably my brain conflating Speaking Rain and Singing Bird? Maybe we could have come up with a more distinct name, hmmm Janet?)

Once we get moving, this book (not unlike Meet Kirsten) is a lean, mean, plot-moving machine: roughly 10 pages of set-up, 10 pages of travel with the raiders, 20 pages of captivity at the Buffalo People's camp, 20 pages of escaping. (I noticed this because I was inclined to complain that it took foreeeeever to get to the camp and get the story going, but it's literally 8 pages from the raid to the camp. So it's just me getting bored by landscape-and-travel passages, per usual. Lord of the Rings took me a lot of peer pressure/encouragement, you guys.)

It's notable that the raiders and their people are not made out to be Bad Guys in any absolute sense, though obviously we don't like the, you know, raiding. Kaya describes a past raiding party in which her father and the other men reclaimed some horses - which suggests to me that they might sometimes be the instigators. Curious to see if that ever comes up.

All of the sign language is a really cool element - it makes sense as a way to trade more broadly in a time that has lots of spoken languages in a region. But I couldn't help wondering if Kaya's captors would also know that sign language, and if so, doesn't that make it easier for someone to "overhear" their early conversations? (As that doesn't happen, maybe I'm overthinking; also there is just no room in this book for anything else!)

The fight Kaya and Two Hawks have over gender roles is... honestly, it just makes me tired. Yes, fine, this boy is acting out because he's been forced to do women's work as a captive and he's over it. But also, there are only two of you alone in the wilderness and winter is literally coming: get over yourself already. Up to that point, it isn't clear from the first two books to what degree Kaya's culture is patriarchal - while there clearly are gender roles, there hadn't yet been any suggestion that one is more privileged. This comes a bit out of the blue and it's not especially welcome.

In the end, it becomes clear that this story needs to happen early in the series because it seeds plot points for later stories. Kaya now has vowed to help get Speaking Rain home, and presumably (in the tradition of Felicity and Penny), we haven't seen the last of Steps High. After all, you don't sell an expensive toy horse if it disappears forever early in the second book...

ashlyn_f_stel's review

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4.0

I liked this one. I didn’t like it quite as much as the first one because I think the characters were fleshed out more in it but I still learned some new things about the Nez Perce tribe. And I may have gotten more if I had read it with my eyes instead of listening to it as an audiobook too but I’m glad I read it!

j_yoon's review against another edition

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adventurous emotional fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes

5.0

krs1st1chase's review against another edition

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2.0

Another struggle with Eve. We might be abandoning the American Girl Challenge. Literally painful for me to read this to Eve. Between the writing just not lending well to be read aloud and Eve interrupting every other sentence to ask what is going on, it is painful.

This is half because Eve may not be old enough for the books and half just bad books.

I don't know if I want to continue.