c.2019, Bloomsbury
$17.99 ($23.99 Canada)
264 pages

You can be anything you want to be!

Thatโ€™s what you were told, growing up: you could do anything, try everything, and be anybody you wanted to be, if you tried. Set your sights on something, and it was yours โ€” so in the new novel โ€œInventing Victoriaโ€ by Tonya Bolden, a young girl wants a better life.

Five-year-old Essie was embarrassed half to death.

High in her attic room, she could still hear the noises of the โ€œunclesโ€ that her Mamma was entertaining but the โ€œunclesโ€ were all white men, which made no sense and Essie hated it. It shouldโ€™ve come as no surprise to anybody that she wanted to go live at Ma Claraโ€™s house, where she never had to worry about food or โ€œuncles.โ€

At 13, Essie had enough.

Ma Clara had helped nourish her mind and her soul, and Essie knew the time was right for her to leave Mamma by taking a job at Abby Bowfieldโ€™s boardinghouse. There, she made her first friend and she dared to dream of a happy future โ€” as if, for a girl whose Mamma escaped from slavery, that wasnโ€™t impossible.

And then the impossible happened.

Miss Dorcas Vashon, who had Room 4 at Miss Abbyโ€™s on permanent hold, took a liking to Essie and made her an offer she couldnโ€™t refuse: Sheโ€™d take Essie away from Savannah and make her into a lady, teach her, form her, correct her speech and fix her slouch. In exchange, Essie would have to give up everything sheโ€™d ever known.

And so, a girl named Essie stepped away from Miss Abbyโ€™s boardinghouse one day, and became Victoria.

At 18, Victoria tried not to look back at her life. Doing so was โ€œexcessively ill-bredโ€ but she couldnโ€™t help it. With the guidance of Dorcas Vashon, sheโ€™d reinvented herself, but there were so many things she didnโ€™t know: how, for example, could a new lady keep an old woman in her heart? How can a lady remember where she came from, without ruining where she was going?

How could Victoria keep living the lie sheโ€™d been given?

Absolutely, โ€œInventing Victoriaโ€ is a familiar story with a different twist: more than a century ago, it was a play. Half that, it was a movie. Now, this โ€œPygmalionโ€-like tale is set in the years after the Civil War, and your teen is going to love it.

Not only is it a great story, author Tonya Bolden also creates settings that invite historical figures to pass through her charactersโ€™ lives. Frederick Douglass is here. James Wormley is mentioned, as is O.S.B. Wall and John Mercer Langston, and Elizabeth Keckley makes dresses for Victoria. These people flow through the tale like itโ€™s an everyday thing to 19th-century folks but for modern readers, Bolden makes their presence feel like visits from royalty.

Relevant, timely and quietly informative, for 12- to 17-year-olds who enjoy gentle adventure plus romance wrapped in a fairy tale, this book is perfect. For her, โ€œInventing Victoriaโ€ is a book sheโ€™ll want to be near.

This correspondent is a guest contributor to The Washington Informer.

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