Calumet Editions

Water Wheels

North Star Kids of the River Mill Era

Book 2 of 3: The North Star Kids

Water Wheels is historical fiction following two immigrant teens in 1870s Minnesota. Halvor Dahl, the son of poor Norwegian Lutheran farmers in the Cannon River valley, and Emelia Meier, daughter of German Catholic merchants in St. Paul, meet and set off on adventures across the state by train, steamboat, and buggy. They face blizzards, fires, crimes, swarms of insects, and a comet while witnessing sweeping social and political change. Along the way they cross paths with figures like James J. Hill, Theodore Hamm, John Pillsbury, Laura Ingalls Wilder, and Jesse James.

gives the reader insight into early farming and early merchant life from 1868 to 1882

—Barbara Parrish, review on Amazon

Description

Water Wheels is a story of historical fiction about two immigrant teenagers who grew up in Minnesota during the 1870s. Halvor Dahl’s Norwegian family are poor Lutheran farmers who settle in the Cannon River valley of southern Minnesota. Emelia Meier’s German family are Catholic merchants in the capital city of St. Paul.

Halvor and Emelia meet each other and experience adventures in all four corners of the state, traveling urban and rural Minnesota by train, steamboat, and horse-drawn buggy. Separately and together, they witness social and political changes, financial ups and downs, crimes, fires, blizzards, swarms of insects, and a comet.

Chapter by chapter, the teens meet and are affected by well-known Minnesota entrepreneurs James J. Hill, Cadwallader Washburn, Isaac Staples, and Theodore Hamm; politicians John Pillsbury, Oliver Kelley, and Ignatius Donnelly; Bishop John Ireland, author Laura Ingalls Wilder, and outlaw Jesse James, in addition to others.

Product Details

PublishedSeptember 28, 2023
ImprintCalumet Editions
LanguageEnglish
Print length260
ISBN-139781960250957
Dimensions6 x 0.65 x 9 inches

In <em>Water Wheels</em> by Michael Barnes, the author has once again made Minnesota history engaging for the Young Adult reader. By following the lives of two young immigrants, one Norwegian and one German, he gives the reader insight into early farming and early merchant life from 1868 to 1882. These two young people interact with actual historical and literary figures as Mark Twain even makes an appearance. Barnes is truly adept at teaching history by combining historical and fictional characters and making it delightful reading. His extraordinary descriptive ability draws us into the story as few have the skill to do. In <em>Water Wheels</em>, Barnes has refined his talent as an author, and I am enthusiastically awaiting his next work.

—Barbara Parrish, review on Amazon