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Hope and have, or, Fanny Grant among the Indians

Oliver Optic

Cover of Hope and have, or, Fanny Grant among the Indians

Hope and have, or, Fanny Grant among the Indians

Age Rating, Reading Level & Content Guide

a story for young people

by Oliver Optic

Reading Level 6 11LE Ages 9-12 Balanced Read

The text is written at a 6th grade reading level, the subject matter is intended for middle graders (ages 9–12), and the content is mild with minimal sensitive material.

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About This Book

Fanny Grant isn’t just any girl—she’s brave and full of hope in a world that’s changing fast. When she finds herself living among the Native Americans in Minnesota, her courage and kindness shine brighter than ever. What will she discover about herself and the true meaning of family?

Quick Assessment

This middle-grade historical fiction novel follows Fanny Grant, an orphan navigating life among Native American communities in Minnesota. It explores themes of resilience, cultural encounter, and personal growth suitable for ages 9-12. Parents should note the story reflects 19th-century perspectives and language, providing historical context alongside engaging adventure.

Why we rated Hope and have, or, Fanny Grant among the Indians 11LE

Hope and have, or, Fanny Grant among the Indians is written at a Level 6 reading level across 264 pages. Strong independent readers around grade 7.0 can typically handle this book on their own; with parent or teacher support, Hope and have, or, Fanny Grant among the Indians works for readers up to grade 8.0.

We rate Hope and have, or, Fanny Grant among the Indians as 11LE ("Light — Emotional") because the content sits in the "Mild" range — mild conflict — the kind a child encounters in normal play and sibling life. Across our four dimensions (emotional, physical, social, thematic) the book reads as evenly mild; no single dimension stands out as a concern.

No specific content flags were raised by community reviewers, which is consistent with the mild intensity score.

Thematically, Hope and have, or, Fanny Grant among the Indians explores coming of age, family, historical, and multicultural — these threads give the book room to mean different things to different readers.

Good fit for

  • Children in the Ages 9-12 range — the maturity and attention span match the story's pacing.
  • Patient readers who enjoy slower, character-driven stories.
  • Readers ready to talk through themes after they finish — there's enough substance for a meaningful conversation.
  • Kids drawn to stories about coming of age, family, historical.

Maybe not for

  • ! Reluctant readers who need a fast hook — the pacing here rewards patience.

For Parents

Content Intensity

11LE — Light — Emotional
Emotional
Light
Physical
Clear
Social
Light
Thematic
Light

Light conflict or tension. Mild peril resolved quickly.

Data confidence: standard

Was our "Mild" content intensity rating accurate for this book?

Reading Insights

Hook Factor

1/10

A steady, thoughtful read that rewards patient readers.

Discussion Potential

4/10

Good conversation starter with themes worth exploring together.

Book DNA

Multi-dimensional content fingerprint

Vocabulary Level
5
Emotional Weight
4
Theme Richness
4
World Scope
3
Data Confidence
7

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Details

Book Length

264 pages
ISBN
9780965273565
Pages
264
Publisher
Lost Classics Book Co.
Published
1996
Type
Fiction

Genres

Subjects

Conduct of LifeOrphansIndians of North AmericaMinnesotaIndians of North America, History

Places

Minnesota