Up a Road Slowly

{{short description|1966 novel by Irene Hunt}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=March 2025}}

{{Infobox book

| name = Up a Road Slowly

| title_orig =

| translator =

| image = Up a Road Slowly cover.jpg

| caption =

| author = Irene Hunt

| illustrator =

| cover_artist = Don Bolognese

| country = United States

| language = English

| series =

| genre =

| publisher = Follett

| release_date = 1966

| media_type = Print (Hardcover and Paperback), Audiobook

| pages = 192 (first edition hardcover)

| isbn = 0695890093

| preceded_by =

| followed_by =

}}

Up a Road Slowly is a 1966 coming-of-age novel by American writer Irene Hunt, which won the Newbery Medal for excellence in American children's literature. This book is about a young child named Julie who grows from 7 to 17 years old with her aunt Cordelia and uncle Haskell in the country.

Plot summary

When seven-year-old Julie's mother dies, she is sent to live with her Aunt Cordelia, an unmarried schoolteacher who lives in a large house several miles outside town. Her uncle Haskell lives in a converted carriage house behind the main house. Haskell is an alcoholic who, like his niece, aspires to be a writer (although he never produces a manuscript). Julie's brother Chris goes to boarding school, leaving her alone with Aunt Cordelia.

At first, grief-stricken Julie finds Aunt Cordelia stern and strict, but as she grows to young adulthood she comes to love her and to see her house as home. She becomes so attached to her that even when she has the chance to move back with her father, who remarries, she declines.

The story follows Julie from the age of seven to seventeen, from elementary school through her high-school graduation, and documents the ordinary events in a child's life: the cruelty of children, jealousy, schoolwork trouble, and first love. Julie also encounters problems in the lives of the adults around her, including alcoholism and mental illness (dementia).

Reception

Kirkus Reviews said of Up a Road Slowly: "The author is adept at distinguishing the genuine from the spurious: Julie is a genuine character, and girls who go up the road with her will share in her growing up."{{cite journal |url=https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-reviews/irene-hunt/up-a-road-slowly/ |journal=Kirkus Reviews |title=UP A ROAD SLOWLY by Irene Hunt |access-date=December 21, 2019}} In a retrospective essay about the Newbery Medal-winning books from 1966 to 1975, children's author John Rowe Townsend wrote, "Though not without faults, Julie seems at last just a little too good to be true, and so does the adult world in which she has won her place. That it is not our world is evident, and is not a just cause for complaint; but was the world ever quite like that?"{{cite book |last=Townsend |first=John Rowe |authorlink=John Rowe Townsend |chapter=A Decade of Newbery Books in Perspective |page=[https://archive.org/details/newberycaldecott0000unse/page/144 144] |title=Newbery and Caldecott Medal Books: 1966-1975 |editor-last=Kingman |editor-first=Lee |publisher=The Horn Book, Incorporated |location=Boston |year=1975 |isbn=0-87675-003-X |url=https://archive.org/details/newberycaldecott0000unse/page/144 }}

References