When it was discovered that thirteen-year-old Tora has leprosy, she is sent from her family’s remote mountain farm to the leprosy hospital in the bustling port of Bergen. In early-nineteenth-century Norway, lepers are quarantined in this hospital and no longer considered among the living. But even as her body gradually fails her, Tora’s new life blossoms. She finds strength through helping her fellow patients, both young and old, and she decides to see for herself what the Bible says about leprosy. To do so, she must make friends with the young and angry Mistress Dybendal, the only person at the hospital who can teach her to read.As she did in The Abduction (an ALA Best Book for Young Adults and a School Library Journal Best Book of the Year), Mette Newth brings another era vividly to life and demonstrates the timeless nature of the search for identity and tolerance.
- ISBN: 9780374317010
- Author: Newth, Mette
- Translator: Ingwersen, Faith
- Published: 1998, Farrar, Straus and Giroux
- Themes: bible, discovery, Family, hospital, Identity, strength
- Descriptors: Fiction, Norway, Young Adult (ages 14-18)
- No. of pages: 245