Tuesday, February 27, 2024

Good Masters! Sweet Ladies! Voices From A Medieval Village by Laura Amy Schlitz

"I wrote these plays for a group of students at the Park School where I work as a librarian.  They were studying the Middle Ages and they were going at it hammer and tongs ... The only difficulty was that there were seventeen children in every class and no one wanted a small part ...  So I decided to write seventeen short plays - monologues - instead of one long one, so that for three minutes at least, every child could be a star" -  Laura Amy Schlitz

Good Masters! Sweet Ladies!: Voices From A Medieval Village was the winner of the Newbery Medal in 2008 for children's literature.  It's the second book I have read for this year's historical fiction challenge hosted by Marg at The Intrepid Reader and Baker. Good Masters! Sweet Ladies! is a novel consisting of 22 short chapters each profiling a different young person living in a 13th century English village:  Hugo, the lord's nephew, Taggot, the blacksmith's daughter, Constance, the pilgrim, Otho, the miller's son, Piers, the glassblower's apprentice etc. Here for example is Nelly, the sniggler talking about her life:

"I was born lucky. Nay, not born lucky, as you shall hear - but lucky soon after and ever after. My father and mother were starving poor, and dreaded another mouth to feed. When my father saw I was a girl-child, he took me up to drown in a bucket of water.  

But here's the lucky part - and 'tis pure sooth. I didn't drown, babe though I was. I took hold with my wee fingers and held to the side of the bucket.  And my mother wept, and my father's heart went soft, and he could no more drown me than himself-and they named me Nelly, for Queen Eleanor". And their luck changed. First my uncle died of the scurvy and we got his pigs. Then the nuns at the abbey hired us to catch eels - and we've been sniggling ever since "

After Nelly the sniggler finishes her story the author let's us know a few facts.  We learn that a sniggler is a person who catches eels and that Nelly was named after Queen Eleanor of Aquitane (1122-1204).  And Nelly as a baby holding on to the edge of the bucket of water her father was trying to drown her in is a true story: "The original plucky newborn was a woman named Liafburga, who lived around 700 a.d."

Laura Amy Schlitz does not sugarcoat life in the 13th century and some may feel that the book is too realistic for children.  But if you are teaching kids about the Middle Ages isn't it better to explain how it really was?  I found Good Masters! Sweet Ladies! a very well written, interesting and educational novel which people should check out.

15 comments:

  1. I've never read this one. I love knowing why the author decided to write it. :D

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Agree more authors should write prologues. And what's interesting about Laura Amy Schlitz is that she has been working as a librarian at the Park School since 1991 and she is still working there even though she has written numerous children's books and is a multiple award winner for those novels.

      Delete
    2. That makes me like her even more. :D

      Delete
  2. Oh, but I think kids absolutely love a bit of awfulness, which is why Roald Dahl is so popular. LOL

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I must read Roald Dahl and I was thinking about the books I was assigned when I was a kid. I don't know what it was about our school but I recall in the 7th and 8th grades we read Johnny Got His Gun, Flowers for Algeron and Lord of the Flies and those books have stayed with me! LOL.

      Delete
  3. Kathy, this sounds like a lovely book and a great way to learn about the Middle Ages. I am interested in knowing more about that time myself. And with illustrations, too. I am a sucker for illustrated books.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi Tracy, I was very impressed with this book too and I read it in kindle form but having a physical copy would be great because the illustrations are also good.

      Delete
  4. This is an interesting idea, and I'm taken by that quoted section you highlighted and how it shows how someone's good luck is very often someone else's bad luck. Kind of hard to be much of an optimist with that coming-of-age experience, I would think.

    Oh, and sign me up for prologues and epilogues; I always read them and am seldom disappointed by them.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I had quite a number of passages I wanted to quote from the book because its very well written. These kids profiled in each chapter really do sound Iike kids who lived in medieval times. The author giving a brief prologue or epilogue to the novel can be very helpful.

      Delete
  5. I enjoyed The Door in the Wall so much that I will have to read Good Masters! Sweet Ladies! as well. I'm sure my library will have a copy. I have loved historical fiction since I learned to read, and I'm so glad to see so many wonderful new titles alongside the perennial favorites.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I am glad you liked A Door In The Wall and I think you will like Good Masters! Sweet Ladies! I did. I was worried after signing up for the challenge to read 15 Medieval Historical novels but then I discovered how many Newbery novels are set in the middle ages and these books are not very long! I need to make room for the Name of The Rose and I am grateful to these children's books or I would never have been able to complete the challenge.

      Delete
  6. I've not heard of this one but I like learning about the Middle Ages. It was a tough existence then. I'm curious to see the book's illustrations. I'll check for it at the library.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi Susan, I would recommend it. The book gives an accurate portrayal of the middle ages I think. And each chapter is very well written in a poetic style which is very readable. It's worth checking out at the library

      Delete
  7. I don't think I have heard of this before either!!

    Thanks for sharing this review with the Historical Fiction Reading Challenge

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks Marg and I will continue to share my Medieval books with the Historical Fiction Reading Challenge

      Delete