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It had been a few years since I'd read Karen Hesse's book Witness, so I took it home over the weekend to review the story. This novel written in verse is set in a small town in Vermont, 1924, and explores the lives of 11 "cast members." The conflict of prejudice pervades throughout the book as the Ku Klux Klan moves into the area to influence townspeople and threaten characters like Wright Sutter and his daughter Leanora, two African-Americans, and the Hirsches, a Jewish father and daughter from New York City. We hear not just from Leanora and Esther Hirsch points of view but also from town constable Percelle Johnson, clergyman Johnny Reeves, and shop owners Harvey and Viola Pettibone. My favorite character became Sara Chickering, a no-nonsense 42 year old single woman, who allows the Hirsches to board in her farmhouse. As she spends time with and gets to know 6-year old Esther, her heart softens and she recognizes "how silent" her "world would be without esther." Each character adds his/her views of the uncertainty and hatred that slowly invades the town; each character is a witness to what occurs.
As I reread the book, its verse style and "haunting voices," as the back of Hesse's book notes, reminded me of my high school teaching days when my students and I studied Edgar Lee Masters' Spoon River Anthology. One by one Hesse's characters paint a picture of the struggles of the characters and the time period, just as Masters' collection of poems do.