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Authors: Rebecca Behrens

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Sir Francis Drake's coat of arms bore the Latin phrase
Sic Parvis Magna
—“greatness from small beginnings.” It's an appropriate quote for the story of Roanoke. It's amazing to think about the legacy of this group of families that sailed from Plymouth, England, in 1587. They left everything they knew and loved for a chance at a better life in a world completely new to them. What bravery that required! Although we haven't yet found their fate on Roanoke, we have never lost their spirit.

ROANOKE TODAY

Roanoke Island is part of the North Carolina Outer Banks, a popular vacation destination as rich in scenery as it is in history. Across the sound, on Bodie Island, you'll find Kitty Hawk—site of the Wright brothers' first powered flight in 1903. Historic lighthouses and national seashores span the barrier islands from Bodie to Ocracoke, where the infamous pirate Blackbeard once made his home. The area is known as the Graveyard of the Atlantic, due to the many shipwrecks over the years.

Roanoke lies nestled between the barrier islands and the mainland. Its history goes beyond the English colonies—it was a Union stronghold during the Civil War and the site of a Freedmen's Colony, where thousands of former slaves found a safe home. It's also home to the longest-running outdoor symphonic drama in the world,
The Lost Colony
. The play is performed in the summer months at the Waterside Theatre at Fort Raleigh National Historic Site.

A few of the places in this book—like Renée's bookstore—are only part of the Roanoke in my imagination. (Although downtown Manteo is home to a lovely bookstore.) However, the four hundred-year-old scuppernong called the Mother Vine is very real. The vine is on private property, but you if you visit Roanoke, you can purchase jelly, juice, and even lip balm made from its grapes. The Festival Park and the sailing ship
Elizabeth II
, the Elizabethan Gardens, and Fort Raleigh are all real places where you can learn more about the many people who have made Roanoke Island their home.

FOR EDUCATORS

To find out more about this book and the lost colony of Roanoke, visit the Resources page at
rebeccabehrens.com
. Available for download are:

Summer of Lost and Found
 
Educator's Guide

A Common Core Curriculum-aligned educator's guide for grades 4–7 as well as tips for struggling readers and enrichment activities for advanced readers.

Includes:

1) pre-reading questions

2) comprehension questions

3) classroom activities

4) bibliography for further research

American History/Social Studies Lesson Plan

The real history of the English colonists' interaction with Native peoples included in
Summer of Lost and Found
is an excellent point of entry into deeper historical study. This lesson plan will guide students to research the people of Roanoke Island in the late 1500s and early 1600s.

Book-Club Discussion Guide

A guide with thought-provoking questions about
Summer of Lost and Found
for readers of all ages to discuss.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

This book found its way to you because of some extraordinary people, to whom I am very grateful:

Alyson Heller, my editor, who gave this book a home, and whose enthusiasm and insight enriched the story. The team at Aladdin is an author's dream. Many thanks to Laura Lyn DiSiena for creating such a beautiful design, to Robyn Ng for illustrating the gorgeous cover art and map, and to Mandy Veloso and Janet Rosenberg for making the words shine.

Suzie Townsend, who provides tireless support, guidance, and encouragement to her authors. She's a superwoman, and I am lucky to have an agent with her skill and kindness in my corner. Thanks to the whole team at New Leaf Literary for being such a wonderful and supportive agency.

My friends, especially Kim Liggett, Michelle Schusterman, and Tara Dairman, who offered wisdom, gentle criticism, and cheerleading in equal measure. Jordan Hamessley, thank you for loving this story—and for taking on the BISAC codes. A special acknowledgment to Laura Stiers, grammar-and-style savant. Every writer should be so lucky as to have Laura's eyes on her work.

Elizabeth Behrens, my sister, who read each draft with enthusiasm, and was always there with a life vest when things were looking rough.

lebame houston, historian of the Roanoke Island Historical Association, who graciously reviewed the manuscript for historical accuracy and taught me much about the island's people and history. Professor William E. Coleman pointed me in the direction of many resources on Elizabethan speech. Their expertise was invaluable in the creation of this book—and any mistakes within are my own.

My teachers, librarians, and booksellers, who opened the world to me through literature. It is thanks to them that I write, and this story in particular started way back in Mrs. Gerlach's fifth-grade class at Thoreau Elementary.

My parents, whose belief in me (and this book) never wavers. Thank you to my Behrens family—Bette, Margaret, Beth, Eyal, and Ben—and my Merriman family—Mark, Brigid, Elise, Grace, and Ben. Most of all, thanks to Blake. The best thing I've ever found is you.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

REBECCA BEHRENS
GREW UP IN WISCONSIN, STUDIED IN CHICAGO, AND NOW LIVES WITH HER HUSBAND IN NEW YORK CITY, WHERE SHE WORKS AS A TEXTBOOK EDITOR. REBECCA LOVES WRITING AND READING ABOUT GIRLS FULL OF MOXIE AND PLACES FULL OF HISTORY. SHE IS THE AUTHOR OF THE MIDDLE-GRADE NOVEL WHEN AUDREY MET ALICE, WHICH BOOKPAGE CALLED “A TERRIFIC WORK OF BLENDED REALISTIC AND HISTORICAL FICTION.” VISIT HER ONLINE AT
WWW.REBECCABEHRENS.COM
.

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ALSO BY REBECCA BEHRENS

When Audrey Met Alice

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BIBLIOGRAPHY

*Cerullo, Mary M.
Shipwrecks: Exploring Sunken Cities Beneath the Sea
. New York: Dutton Children's Books, 2009.

*Fritz, Jean.
The Lost Colony of Roanoke
. New York: G. P. Putnams's Sons, 2004.

*Hakim, Joy.
A History of US: The First Americans: Prehistory–1600.
3rd ed. New York: Oxford University Press, 2003.

houston, lebame, and Barbara Hird, eds.
Roanoke Revisited: The Story of the Lost Colony
. Manteo, North Carolina: Penny Books, 1997.

Kupperman, Karen Ordahl.
Roanoke: The Abandoned Colony
. Lanham, Maryland: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc., 2007.

LaVere, David. “The 1937 Chowan River ‘Dare Stone': A Re-Evaluation.”
North Carolina Historical Review
86, no. 3 (July 2009): 250.

Miller, Lee.
Roanoke: Solving the Mystery of the Lost Colony
. New York: Arcade Publishing, Inc., 2000.

National Park Service. “Fort Raleigh National Historic Site: Long-Range Interpretive Plan.” May 2010.
nps.gov/hfc/pdf/ip/2010-05-14-fora-finaldocument.pdf
.

National Park Service. “Secrets in the Sand: Archeology at Fort Raleigh, 1990–2010: Archeology Resource Study.” Manteo, North Carolina: National Park Service, 2011.

Quinn, David Beers.
The Lost Colonists and Their Probable Fate
. Raleigh, North Carolina: North Carolina Department of Cultural Resources, 1984.

Quinn, David Beers and Alison M. Quinn.
The First Colonists: Documents on the Planting of the First English Settlements in North America 1584–1590
. Raleigh, North Carolina: North Carolina Department of Cultural Resources, 2007.

The Outer Banks of North Carolina 2014 Official Travel Guide
. Manteo, North Carolina: The Outer Banks Visitors Bureau, 2014.

Time Team America: Fort Raleigh, NC
. United States: PBS Home Video, 2009.

Turnage, Sheila.
Compass American Guides: North Carolina,
5th ed. New York: Random House, 2009.

*Yolen, Jane and Heidi Elisabet Yolen Stemple.
Roanoke, the Lost Colony: An Unsolved Mystery from History
. New York: Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers, 2003.

*Resources for young readers

SELECTED ONLINE RESOURCES

Algonquian Indians of North Carolina, Inc.

ncalgonquians.com

“Croatoan Indians.” NCpedia.

ncpedia.org/croatoan-indians

“Dare Stones.” NCpedia.

ncpedia.org/dare-stones

Elizabethan Gardens (official website).

elizabethangardens.org

First Colony Foundation.

firstcolonyfoundation.org

Fort Raleigh National Historic Site.

nps.gov/fora/index.htm

Fort Raleigh: Time Team America, PBS.

pbs.org/time-team/explore-the-sites/fort-raleigh/

Harper, Douglas. Online Etymology Dictionary.

etymonline.com

“History of Muscadines and Scuppernongs.”

scuppernongs.com/id2.html

Keiger, Dale. “Rethinking Roanoke.”

Johns Hopkins Magazine
, November 2011.

pages.jh.edu/~jhumag/1101web/roanoke.html

“Outer Banks Folklore.” Outer Banks Information.

outerbeaches.com/OuterBanks/AllAboutOBX/Folklore/

“Virtual Jamestown: First-Hand Accounts.”

virtualjamestown.org/fhaccounts_date.html

Roanoke Island Festival Park: Official Website.

roanokeisland.com/default.aspx

“Robert Cawdrey's A Table Alphabetical (1604).”

library.utoronto.ca/utel/ret/cawdrey/cawdrey0.html

Shakespeare's Words.

shakespeareswords.com

The Outer Banks of North Carolina.

outerbanks.org

“The Search for the Lost Colony.” North Carolina Digital History.

learnnc.org/lp/editions/nchist-twoworlds/1835

“The Settlement at Roanoke: A Timeline.” Durham University Library.

community.dur.ac.uk/4schools.resources/Roanoke/Timeline.htm

Additional resources and links to articles are available at

rebeccabehrens.com
.

This book is a work of fiction. Any references to historical events, real people, or real places are used fictitiously. Other names, characters, places, and events are products of the author's imagination, and any resemblance to actual events or places or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

ALADDIN

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1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, New York 10020

www.SimonandSchuster.com

First Aladdin hardcover edition May 2016

Text copyright © 2016 by Rebecca Behrens

Illustrations copyright © 2016 by Robyn Ng

All rights reserved, including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form.

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