Forge (Seeds of America, #2)
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Forge (Seeds of America #2)

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4.1 of 5 stars 4.10  ·  rating details  ·  1,635 ratings  ·  477 reviews
The young soldiers at Valley Forge are suffering from hunger, cold, and the threat of the British army. Their newly forged bonds of friendship might be enough to help them survive. But the chains of Curzon’s past threaten to shackle him again.

Surrounded by the fires of ignorance, mistrust, and greed, Curzon can’t risk sharing his deadly secrets with anyone. Doe...more
MP3 CD, Library Edition, 7 pages
Published October 19th 2010 by Brilliance Audio
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Thomas
Forge was a compelling book about the Revolutionary War, specifically the events that took place at Valley Forge. The main character, Curzon, is an escaped adolescent slave who enlists in order to keep himself safe and serve a purpose.

I liked this book, but not as much as its predecessor, Chains. Generally I do not enjoy historical fiction, so the fact that I finished this book in a couple of days says something about Laurie Halse Anderson’s writing ability. She keeps things interest...more
Jeanette
The refresher course in American history was my favorite thing about this book.
Valley Forge, winter of 1777-78. Remember learning about that in school? Thousands of men (and quite a few women, too) starved and froze all winter long, and many died. The suffering was largely a result of incompetence and poor planning on the part of their leaders. Some things never change...

The continuing story of Curzon and Isabel was enjoyable, if a little contrived. I think it will appeal to ...more
Johnp
I had high hopes for this book, since I was very impressed with the Chains, the first book in this Colonial America series. While Chains focused on the drama of the slave Isabel, this book focused mainly on her friend Curzon. The book opens with Curzon enlisting in the Colonial Army. He finds himself camped at Valley Forge during the winter of 1777-1778, the time where so many men lost their lives to harsh conditions (and not war!).

Boy, was this BORING! OK, we learned how low you ...more
Rickyjez
Rarely am I tempted to glance at the end of a book first, but after reading Anderson's previous book 'Chains' and discovering the story would continue in 'Forge'--my curiosity was piqued. While once again Anderson's story is not conclusive, fortunately 'Ashes' (the next in the series) is available this October! This YA story revolves around the lives of fictional characters Curzon and Isabel who 'lived' during the American Revolution. The author has gathered and shared numerous historical refer...more
James (JD) Dittes
How much do literary folks really know about the Continental Army's two winters at Valley Forge? Until recently, Young Adult reading about the Revolutionary War was monopolized by Johnny Tremain, but significant YA writers like M.T. Anderson (Octavian Nothing) and Ann Rinaldi have filled the gap. I think Anderson's ongoing series should come out on top.



I enjoyed Chains, I loved Forge. I think it's because I'm a boy--or was one at one time (as my own teenaged daughter likes to remind me). Tol...more
Kaci
This is the second book in a series of three titled Seeds of America. Forge follows Curzon as he enlists in the Continental Army, is taken back by Mr. Bellingham, his "owner," and meets up with Isabel, who had run away from Curzon to find her sister Ruth but was captured and sold back into slavery. Laurie Halse Anderson is a genius. I love learning about how our country gained its freedom from Britain while also reading a very well-written and at times, poetic novel. The chapters t...more
Madison
Forge, the sequel to the book chains is a book with adventure romance and action. Forge is the story of two runaway slaves fighting for their freedom. The story starts out with Curzon saving a young fellow from death by killing a red coat with a rock. Then Curzon decided that he will sign up for the war again. He made many friends and some enemies with his fellow soldiers. Eben the boy Curzon saved from death by the redcoat became his most loyal friend and helped him many times along the way. W...more
Beverly
Beverly rated it 4 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommends it for: 13-16 year olds
Recommended to Beverly by: YALSA
Forge,the outstanding sequel to Chains, by truly gifted YA author Laurie Halse Anderson, will turn even reluctant readers into lovers of historical fiction and make history buffs out of even the most resistant student(young or old). The very accurate descriptions of the horrid living conditions in the colonial military camps during the winter or 1777 sound like something out of a holocaust history. The battle scenes are equally accurate, equally horrifying and action packed. Anderson also does a...more
Aaron
In this great anticipated sequel to Chains, Anderson continues her story of a pair of slaves living through the American Revolution. This time, the story shifts from the viewpoint of Isabel to Curzon. At the conclusion of the earlier novel, the two have escaped from bondage in 1777 New York City and fled to New Jersey, where they stayed for a few months before becoming separated. Isabel wanted to continue south toward Maryland, where her her sister was likely sold off to, while Curzon knows t...more
Krista
Laurie Halse Anderson came to our local children's bookstore and I went to hear her speak. She was an unassuming personage, more like a gal you'd run into at the Target than a highly-acclaimed author. But her passion for this era of our history was palpable; her inner brilliance showed in her eyes and her voice as she talked about how her whole life changed when she discovered that Benjamin Franklin owned slaves. And she wanted to write about it. For kids. Because kids need to know about our spo...more
Heidi
Forge, the follow-up to Chains, continues the adventures of Isabel and her friend Curzon. Chains was told from Isabel's point of view, Forge is told from Curzon's point of view, which presents us with a different picture. After rescuing, Curzon from prison (he was a prisoner of war), Isabel becomes frustrated with Curzon's unwillingness to search for her sister and takes off on her own. The story follows Curzon into the heart of the American Revolution. Curzon ends up at Valley Forge, struggl...more
Karen Ball
"This camp is a forge for the army; it's testing our qualities. Instead of heat and hammer, our trials are cold and hunger. Question is, what are we made of?"
The war for American freedom is the setting for Curzon and Isabel's fight for their own freedom. They have escaped New York and their respective slaveowning masters,but while Isabel is determined to get to South Carolina to find and free her little sister, Curzon thinks it is utter stupidity to head into the waiting traps ...more
Jon Cox
Forge is a well written fictional account of the Continental Army's miserable conditions at Valley Forge during the Revolutionary War. It definitely made me wonder how anyone survived the winter there. I agree with Anderson's conclusion that Valley Forge was an appropriate and symbolic site for the winter encampment because of how it tempered the steel of the American will.

The story of Curzon and Isabel is an interesting one as well. Anderson does a good job of making the characters ...more
Jan
A sequel to Chains, which was a National Book Award Finalist. Forge continues the story begun in Chains, but this time the novel is written from the point of view of Curzon, a slave owned by a man who has cast his lot with the Colonial rebellion against the British. At the conclusion of Chains, Curzon and Isabel have escaped their masters and run away together. But Isabel is intent on finding her sister, Ruth, and quarrels with Curzon, taking his money and running away again. Curzon falls in...more
Sophia
Forge was compelling.

We follow Curzon rather than Isabel in the second book in the Seeds of America series; the plot picks up immediately. Curzon joins the Patriot Army after befriending a boy, Ebenezer, whose life Curzon saved. The story after that is thrilling, weaving back and forth, painting a picture of the Revolutionary War while at the same time dodging the question pinning you to the book-where is Isabel? Curzon is trying to tough it out through the long winter, along with h...more
Lars Guthrie
Unlike ‘Chains,’ its War of Independence predecessor, ‘Forge’ wastes no time getting in gear. Curzon, a young slave whom we had last seen as his friend Isabel rescued him from a British prison ship, is almost immediately thrown into the Battles of Saratoga.

As fighting overtakes him, Curzon hides in the woods, only to witness a showdown between a redcoat and a Patriot soldier. The Continental, fumbling to reload his flintlock, looks to be an easy target. Then Curzon unleashes a r...more
Eva Mitnick
In the sequel to Chains, Curzon takes up the story of what happened to Isabel and him after their hair-raising escape from New York City. After a few months together, Curzon finds himself alone and on the run, and almost immediately (and certainly unintentionally) he becomes a soldier in the 16th Massachusetts Regiment of the Northern Continental Army of the United States of America.
This is an integrated regiment, and Curzon's fellow soldiers are a mostly young, friendly bunch (with one n...more
Reader
Let not the naysayers or saynayers tell you that this book is any less impressive than its predecessor Chains. Anderson knocks it entirely out of the park once again and readers will be the ones to reap the benefits. In this latest historical thriller (her term) Anderson follows the former slave Curzon, now fighting in the Revolutionary War, then escaping and ending up in its midst all over again. Suffering through the deprivations foisted upon him and his fellow soldiers, Curzon can't help b...more
Margo Tanenbaum
If by some chance you missed Chains, you'll want to read it before delving into this sequel--the second volume of a planned trilogy. Chains, set at the beginning of the Revolutionary War, focuses on the story of Isabel, a 13-year old slave owned by a prominent New York City family who support the British. Isabel meets another slave, Curzon, with ties to the Patriots, and becomes a spy for the Patriot cause--with the hopes of obtaining her freedom.

In Forge, the story begins where C...more
Nicole
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Josiah
Forge is a near-perfect example of what historical fiction can be when molded in the hands of an expert author. Laurie Halse Anderson has an uncanny knack for making the past times of our nation's history come to life in full force, allowing us to vividly experience not only the unlikely power of the early American resolve, but also the simmering righteous anger of the blacks who still could not find freedom even among the American Patriots, our forefathers who vociferously championed the phi...more
Molly McLeod
Every bit as powerful, heart-poundingly suspenseful, fascinating, and honest as CHAINS. I am in love with this series.

Curzon's voice is so solidly written, and every time you think you can put the book down, something unthinkable happens and you have to keep reading. Not that this is a bad thing, it can just keep you up later than you'd like and make you extend your lunch breaks, etc...

This made me think a lot (especially since yesterday was Veteran's Day) about how many sol...more
Ariel Uppstrom
I enjoyed this novel better than its prequel, "Chains". It seemed more realistic and personal and less artificial. This book follows the boy introduced in the last book, Curzon. Curzon and Isabel escaped at the end of the last book and this one starts with Curzon alone after having been left by Isabel. He is recruited by circumstances to join the military and participate at Valley Forge. Unfortunately, his old master finds him and forces him back into slavery at his hands. He the...more
Dree
The second book in a YA series (Chains is the first), this novel changes perspective. While Chains is narrated by the slave Isabel, Forge is narrated by her friend Curzon. The change in narrative from girl to boy is handled well.

This book covers the year after their escape from New York. They split as Isabel heads to find her sister Ruth in South Carolina, and Curzon makes his way as a free boy. He enlists in the army for his second time, and spends the winter at the Valley Forge encam...more
Becky
Forge is a beautifully written book with meticulous research obvious. I learned quite a bit about the American Revolution though this book is totally focused on the Valley Forge experience. Each chapter begins with a quotation from a primary document from the time period. The conditions of the men doing their best to survive through the bitter winter to be ready to fight the British as soon as the weather broke was palpable. This is a sequel to Anderson's well regarded book, Chains, which I have...more
Janelle
Spend Christmas in Valley Forge with the Revolutionary Army.

I really love these books. Forge is told from Curzon's (a slave fighting in the revolutionary war) point of view. He is an easy character to feel empathy for as well as a clear headed and logical fellow. I was hoping this book would truly be a sequel and not a series, so I was disappointed to learn that I will have to wait (again!) for these characters to find either peace or death in forthcoming books. I'm hoping the next bo...more
Marianne Connelly
Forge
Anderson,Laurie Halse
Atheneum
2010

This is the sequel to the much acclaimed book Chains. The book Forge focuses more on Curzon than on Isabel. In this story Isabel and Curzon have split up. Isbel goes in search of her younger sister Ruth down south. Curzon stays up north
were he joins the army and serves at Valley Forge. While there, his old master comes back and claims him. Curzon protests adn says that he is a free man, but does not have the paper...more
Jeremiah M
How does it feel like that you have to do anything just so for your survival? The book Forge by Laurie Halse Anderson shows a story of many people fight for their survival including slaves. Everyone is practically in a war against British against patriots. A young slave who is trying to survive through this massacre has to do some choices that he is rather not fond of doing. But however he will meet some people that may help him on his quest for survival and his goal. This is a book where you h...more
Judith
This book picks up where Chains ended and is told through Curzon's point of view. Shortly after Isabel and Curzon's escape New York, they begin to argue about their next move. Isabel wants to search for her sister, Ruth, who was sent away to Carolina by her mistress in the book Chains, while Curzon believes he and Isabel should find work and settle down for a while. Isabel, determined to find and rescue her sister, steals all of Curzon's money and runs away to find Ruth. Curzon is left to fen...more
Nick
I found this book to be an intriguing look at a turning point in American history, from a very different viewpoint. Curzon is an escaped slave who gets caught up in the events of the American Revolution, and dragged through both the practical and moral quandaries of the times. In his case, one of the key ones is the issue of freedom vs. slavery, since it was actually the British government who came down slightly on the side of freedom. They, not the Americans, offered freedom to slaves who would...more
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4th Period: Forge 1 1 Dec 12, 2011 05:14pm  
Forge (Seeds of America, #2)
Forge (Seeds of America, #2)
Forge (Seeds of America, #2)
Forge (Seeds of America, #2)
Forge (Seeds of America, #2)

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Laurie Halse Anderson is the New York Times-bestselling author who writes for kids of all ages. Known for tackling tough subjects with humor and sensitivity, her work has earned numerous ALA and state awards. Two of her books, Speak and Chains, were National Book Award finalists.

Mother of four and wife of one, Laurie lives in Northern New York, where she likes to watch the snow fall as...more
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“This camp is a forge for the army; it's testing our mettle. Instead of heat and hammer, our trials are cold and hunger. Question is, what are we made of?” 3 people liked it
“We'd itch the vermin feasting on our flesh and share the day's many rumors:

The King had declared peace.
No, the King was sending German and Russian mercenaries to destroy us.


A ball of fire as big as a man's head fell from heaven to Hatboro - a good omen. But there'd been an earthquake near York just as a cat gave birth to puppies, which meant the worst.”
1 person liked it
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