Skip to main content
PBS logo
 
 

Book Reviews of Call Me Kate: Meeting the Molly Maguires

Call Me Kate: Meeting the Molly Maguires
Call Me Kate Meeting the Molly Maguires
Author: Molly Roe
ISBN-13: 9780981461953
ISBN-10: 0981461956
Publication Date: 11/24/2008
Pages: 168
Rating:
  • Currently 3.8/5 Stars.
 2

3.8 stars, based on 2 ratings
Publisher: Tribute Books
Book Type: Hardcover
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

3 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

donkeycheese avatar reviewed Call Me Kate: Meeting the Molly Maguires on + 1255 more book reviews
From the first page, when the mining bell rings through the town, with Kate being called from the school, Call Me Kate grabbed my attention. It never let go until I turned the last page. Kate is a charismatic and fearless character who I immediately liked. Trying to survive in a time where everything was simple and education took a back seat to working for a living, I found this novel fascinating, and historical accurate as I recall learning about it. It's devastating to see such young children working the mines, and to see such hardship with no hope for tomorrow. You won't want to miss this journey with Kate, it is extraordinary and I am definitely glad I picked this one up! Young adults and adults will enjoy this one.
confuzzledbooks avatar reviewed Call Me Kate: Meeting the Molly Maguires on + 482 more book reviews
In 1862, a young Pennsylvania girl named Kate McCafferty stops going to school after her father is injured working in the coal mines. Now she has to be the bread winner and gets a job in another town as a maid. Soon she hears about how awful the coal miners are being treated and begins posing as a boy in the Molly Maguires, an rough underground Irish group who tried to improve the coal miners lot. Will she get caught, or will the coal miners get the benefits?

I was attracted to this book because my family comes from coal miners in the same area where young Kate lived. There are some family rumors that my great great grandfather was in the group, but that is another story. I thought this book seemed well researched. As I read, I felt as if I was in the story.
GeniusJen avatar reviewed Call Me Kate: Meeting the Molly Maguires on + 5322 more book reviews
Reviewed by Jaglvr for TeensReadToo.com

Catharine "Katie" McCafferty has grown up in the midst of the Pennsylvania coal mining community. The owners of the coal mines can pretty much run the lives of those that rely on the mines for their livelihood. If the head of the household becomes injured due to safety issues in the mines, the remaining family members must come together to pay the rent or they will lose their home.

Many of the miners are paid in scrip, which is only good at the company-owned store. Struggling is a way of life. But Katie's family and neighbors have always gotten by and relied on each other.

When Katie's father is injured at work and loses the use of his legs, Katie takes it upon herself to help her family stay afloat. Her mother secures her a temporary domestic help job for a local bachelor. When that job ends, she finds herself traveling to a large estate to become live-in help. It's while Katie works for the Pardee family that she becomes entangled in the intrigue and secret Irish societies determined to help those drafted into the Army by backhanded means.

The Molly Maguires are just one of these organizations that fight for the rights of the second-class miners. The members are willing to destroy rail lines and scarify lives for the good of the larger whole. Katie becomes scared for her long-time friend, Con, who has taken up with the group and fears for his life. She befriends the stable boy at Pardee's estate and the two try to sidetrack the horrible plot to blow up the tracks.

CALL ME KATE was a fascinating look at the time period of the early drafts for the Civil War. It focuses on a specific area of the country and the conflict that arose among the different classes and ethnicities. Being from Pennsylvania, I could picture many of the places that were referenced and got a brief history lesson on a time period that I wasn't very familiar with. For anyone interested in getting some history with their fiction, CALL ME KATE is a good book to add to your choices.