The middle ages has always held a great deal of appeal for me, so I decided to revisit an old favorite. The Midwife's Apprentice tells the story of a young girl who has no name, no family, no home and not future. All she knows is getting through today. She is called Dung Beetle by the more fortunate villagers because she often sleeps in a dung heap to keep warm, and eats of of a garbage heap that never satisfies her gnawing hunger.How Beetle ended up like this is unknown to her, she has not memory other than that of being homeless. But one day, she is woken from her dung heap sleep by a sharp faced, sharp voiced woman, who is the village midwife. In need of an apprentice, she takes Beetle home and over time teaches her to do the more unpleasant tasks associated with the job of delivering babies.Beetle is smart and a quick learner, even though the midwife, Jane Sharp, always puts her down and tells her how stupid she is. Jane never lets Beetle into a house where she is delivering a baby, the better to keep her ignorant of how it is done. But little by little, Beetle learns. First, she helps a village boy, Will Russet, deliver his cows twins calves. Than she has an opportunity to successfully deliver a woman's baby, using what she learned from Will Russet's calves. But when she is requested for a second delivery, she can't do it and must call Jane Sharp to finish the job.Told she is too stupid and a failure for this kind of work, Beetle runs away. She takes a job as an inn girl, again doing all the dirty work. But little by little, be once more begins to pick up some learning, including some letters and words thanks to the indirect help of a scholar staying at the inn. When she learns that the name Alyce begins with the letter A, a letter she now knows, Beetle decides this will be her name from now on.One day, Jane Sharp shows up at the inn and Alyce overhears her talking to the scholar about her, and discovers that Jane didn't thing she was so useless and stupid after all, but she was disappointed when Alyce ran away when things didn't go well and midwives can't to that.Having a name, having an identity, and considering about what Jane Sharp thinks of her, will Alyce be able to find the courage to really change her life and her future?The Midwife's Apprentice is a small coming-of-age story that doesn't waste words. Each chapter gets to the point, moving the story along quickly and with brevity, and yet much happens. Slowly, with only a calico cat as her constant friend and companion, Alyce manages to transform herself despite many obstacles and even helps a fellow orphan boy along the way. Alyce is a very sympathetic character, surrounded by some mean, selfish people, yet they all manage to impart something that helps her go from being Beetle to becoming Alyce. There is even a hint of a romance possibility as Will Russet begins to see Alyce as more of a human being and less of a dung beetle.Much as I like the character of Alyce, I really like the way Cushman shows her journey as one of process and something that needs to be worked on that has success and failure along the way. Jane Sharp taking Alyce out of the dung didn't bring a complete change in Alyce's circumstances, but was the first step in away from her old life.Karen Cushman won the Newbery Medal for The Midwife's Apprentice in 1996.This book is recommended for readers age 9+This book was purchased for my personal libraryThe book was originally published at Randomly Reading
The story opens with a young girl with no name, no family, burying herself in a dung heap for warmth. The girl is taken in by a midwife, Jane, who dubs her Beetle for her choice of sleeping quarters. Jane’s decision to take Beetle in is not due to benevolence, however, but greed; Jane sees that Beetle is a hard worker who will lighten her load. Jane gives Beetle all the difficult work of her profession, but she is careful to keep Beetle away from observing Jane during delivery, fearing Beetle will learn the secrets of midwifery and become a competitor.Slowly Beetle grows in experience and self-confidence, saving a boy from drowning, aiding a cow in delivering twins, even helping a mother with an impossible delivery give birth to a healthy girl. Beetle renames herself Alyce and she begins to learn Jane’s secrets and aid Jane in deliveries.Then Alyce is confronted with a tough delivery. She finds she must call Jane in to save the mother and child. Alyce is left feeling despondent, useless. She runs away. It is only after much reflection that she is able to acknowledge her love for midwifery and to accept that failure is part of learning and to return to her work with Jane.
What do You think about The Midwife's Apprentice (1996)?
Put this one in the "spunky girl/not a princess" category.I read this really fast, in a couple of hours. Well, it's a kid's book after all.It's about a girl, an orphan, who has nothing and nobody, who makes a life for herself. What I most appreciated about this book is that bad stuff happens, not everyone is kind, it's more like real life than a lot of fakey sweet books intended for kids that I've read in the past. Life is hard for this girl, but she is clever (even though she doesn't know that for a long time) and she is bold and she works HARD.Recommended!
—HeavyReader
Read this in 2007 or so but have no memory of what I thought. Which is why I write everything down in GR now. I hate letting books fall out of my head.
—lucy by the sea
The midwife finds Brat asleep in a dung heap. She says she will work for food, so the midwife takes her on, having her do the housekeeping and herb-gathering and renames Brat, Beetle. Beetle is not allowed to assist when the midwife delivers a baby, but she watches from the windows and learns the midwife’s skills.One day, she gets to go to the fair to buy things for the midwife. There, she decides that she needs a real name, a proper name, and starts calling herself Alyce. One day, in the middle of a difficult birth, the midwife gets called away and leaves Alyce in charge. No one expected the baby to be delivered alive, but Alyce talks the mother through the process and the baby survives.After that, people start coming to Alyce more than the midwife, but when Alyce needs to call the midwife for help during a difficult birth, she sees herself as a failure and runs away, leaving the life she had built for herself.This is a great book for an older child about making your place in the world. It's a Newberry winner and Cushman's attention to historical detail is superb. It's a short, little book, but it's meaty and packs a lot of punch.
—Jennie