Bibframe Work
TitleSet me freeTypeTextMonographSubjectDeaf children--Juvenile fiction (LCSH)Deaf people--Education--Juvenile fiction (LCSH)Deaf people--Social conditions--19th century--Juvenile fiction (LCSH)Identity (Psychology)--Juvenile fiction (LCSH)Secrecy--Juvenile fiction (LCSH)American Sign Language--Juvenile fiction (LCSH)Massachusetts--History--19th century--Juvenile fiction (LCSH)Martha's Vineyard (Mass.)--History--19th century--Juvenile fiction. (LCSH)Deaf people--Fiction (CHILDRENSSUBJECTS)People with disabilities--Fiction (CHILDRENSSUBJECTS)Education--Fiction (CHILDRENSSUBJECTS)Identity--Fiction (CHILDRENSSUBJECTS)Secrets--Fiction (CHILDRENSSUBJECTS)Sign Language--Fiction (CHILDRENSSUBJECTS)Massachusetts--History--19th century--Fiction (CHILDRENSSUBJECTS)Martha's Vineyard (Mass.)--History--19th century--Fiction. (CHILDRENSSUBJECTS) ClassificationLCC: PZ7.L59114 Se 2021 (Assigner: dlc) (Status: used by assigner)DDC: 813.6Fic full (Source: 23) SummaryThree years after being kidnapping from her home in Martha's Vineyard, fourteen-year-old Mary Lambert receives a letter from Nora O'Neal, a servant in the house where she was held, who tells her of an eight-year-old girl where she is now employed whom Nora believes to be a deaf-mute, but who is being treated as insane, and asks Mary to come and teach the nameless child; a little scared, but intrigued, and bored with domestic life, Mary agrees--only to find that there is more to the child's story, and that freeing her from a world of silence and imprisonment may be more dangerous than anyone anticipated.Intended AudiencePre-adolescentAges 8-12. Scholastic Press.Grades 4-6. Scholastic Press. Authorized Access PointLeZotte, Ann Clare Set me free