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August 2006 Vol. 7 Issue 8


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This month's book reviews

A boy loves a new puppy which has
already been promised to someone else

Tom had come really close to getting into trouble at school just before the end of the term. It all worked out, but he was sure glad to see summer vacation arrive so he could visit his grandparents. Tom's grandfather had bought part of a dairy farm close to the airport just out of town. The grandfather had converted the dairy barn into a large kennel where he raised and trained dogs - especially hunting dogs - for sale.

This summer would be different for Tom. His grandfather had recently had a heart attack and had undergone heart surgery. Tom, along with his mom, would have to help with the dogs at the kennel while his grandmother took care of her husband when he came home from the hospital. It was going to be difficult to keep grandfather away from his dogs long enough for his body to completely heal.

There were thirty-six dogs, along with new puppies, to take care of. Grandfather knew them all by name. Besides keeping the kennels cleaned out, one of Tom's first jobs was to go to town to buy labels. He printed the names of the dogs and placed the labels over each of the pens. That way, like grandfather, the temporary caretakers used the dogs' names all the time, the dogs learned their names quickly, and they responded better during the training sessions.

All the adult dogs had to be taken out for exercise every day. Some of them could be trusted to run through the fields and come back when called. Others had to be kept on a leash or they could run off and get lost or hurt by cars along the road. As his grandfather was recovering from his operation, Tom was learning more and more about the different personalities that the dogs had.

One, called "Old Gabe," sometimes jumped against the cage and growled angrily at Tom, almost scaring him to death. Tom learned that "old Gabe" would only do this when the dog thought he could catch Tom off guard. If Tom was alert, the dog acted indifferent to Tom's presence. Only later, did Tom find out that his grandfather used the dog's cantankerous personality in helping train other hunting dogs.

In one litter of new puppies, a pointer pup seemed unusually intelligent and sensitive. He responded to Tom like none of the other puppies did. Tom secretly named the dog "Tad" and hoped that he could talk grandfather into giving him the pup. He was shocked when he found out that his granddad had promised the owner of the puppies' father the pick of the litter. Tom knew the man would recognize how Tad stood out from the rest of the puppies and be sure to pick him. What could Tom do? He knew his grandfather would always keep his word and not try to talk the man out of taking first choice.

This is a good book to read to learn about doing the honorable thing. It is also a good book to read to learn more about caring for and training dogs.

A twelve-year-old sketch artist plays detective
in downtown Seattle

Hannah West is the adopted Chinese daughter of Maggie West, an art critic and writer, who had recently lost her full-time job. The mother had accidentally stumbled into apartment and home-setting for people who were to be away for long periods of time. It gave the mother and daughter a chance to live in nice places at no cost. Of course, it meant they had no permanent home and had to move around a lot. They supplemented their income by the mother doing free lance writing and working in a coffee shop, as she tried to stay connected to the art community in Seattle. Hannah, on the other hand, had cards printed up advertising her willingness to take care of people's pets for a fee. Her connection to the art world was that she carried a sketch pad and drew pictures at every opportunity.

The mother and daughter's latest job at house-setting was in an expensive high-rise condominium in a plush section of town. While looking down at the street from her new high vantage point, Hannah noticed unusual activity on the street below on the part of a uniformed bicycle messenger. At that moment, she didn't realize that what she saw would involve her in trying to solve the mystery of a series of art thefts over the next few weeks.

Both Hannah and her mother are very active characters. In her efforts to stay in contact with the art world, Mrs. West meets many figures from the art world and attends many exhibits and art functions. Hannah, of course, comes into contact with all of these adults, but she has a best friend of her own age that she sees frequently. Because she moves around a lot, Hannah has to use the transit system to get to her school. She uses the address of a friend of her mothers to enable her to stay in the same school, even as she moves around to different neighborhoods. On her long bus rides, she is always sketching faces of people and different scenes around the city. Little did she guess that her drawing might help her later to solve the mystery behind the art thefts.

Young readers will enjoy keeping up with the fast pace that Hannah sets in trying to juggle all her activities and solve a crime at the same time.

A boy breaks his leg in a farm accident
and feels rejected by his father

Nathanial James (Nate) was just eleven but he knew his help around the family farm was essential to his family's being able to keep their land. They were homesteaders in Nebraska in the late 1800's. His dad had to borrow money to pay for seeds, farm animals, and other necessities. If the farm was not successful, the bank would end up taking over their land. The James family would have to move on once again.

Nate was helping his father get hay into the barn before heavy rain would ruin it in the field. Thunder and lightning spooked the horses while Nate was hurrying to toss hay from the farm wagon. He lost his balance and, in falling, broke his leg in several places. The doctor worked to save his leg, but Nate was told he would be lucky if he could even just walk again on his injured leg. In the future, he would never be able to do heavy work around a farm. He would have to spend weeks in bed and not using the leg in order to give it a chance to heal enough for him to limp on it. Now, what would his father do with no help? Could they possibly hold on to their homestead?

Nate's mom was good at fixing things. People brought tools, broken pots and pans, non-working clocks, and other things to be repaired. These people though Nat's father was a tinker, or handyman. They didn't realize, and were never told, that it was the wife and not the husband that fixed their broken items. In that era, people didn't believe women could or should do that kind of work. The repairs were paid for with eggs or other items of trade. Mrs. James' work helped the family survive in the tough frontier atmosphere.

Since Nate was unable to do much as he recovered from his injury, he tried to learn from his mom how to fix things. He wasn't good at it. He could take a clock apart; he just couldn't get it back together. Since he was likely to be a cripple, it became more important for Nate to learn to read much better than he had up to that time. In fact, after he healed, he started to go to the one room school. He found he couldn't read as well as the much younger kids who had been attending school regularly. The other kids made fun of him. He began to feel more and more useless.

One day, Nathaniel's father returned from town with a boy about Nate's age. The boy was from the Orphan Train that brought homeless kids from the big cities in the east. The boy's name was John and he was strong and healthy. If Nate couldn't help around the farm, his dad would adopt a boy who could help out. Now Nate really felt useless since, it seemed to him, that his dad was replacing him with another son.

Along with all the other troubles the James' family was having, they also had to put up with cattlemen who would cut the fences and let cattle in to ruin the farm crops. Nate and John joined together to figure out how to put a stop to that problem.

You need to read the book to find out how Nate finally was able to overcome his feelings of worthlessness and regain his confidence that he was a valued and contributing member of his hard-working family.

London during the plague of the 1680's
seen from two different perspectives

Actually, "The Plague" by Phillip Wooderson is two books bound together, with one titled "The Plague - Rachel's Story" and the other titled "The Plague - Robert's Story." The reader is told to read Rachel's story first and only then to read Robert's story.

Rachel is the daughter of a cloth merchant. The father was successful enough that the family lived in a house in the city that was reasonably comfortable for those times. They had a household servant girl named Jess. A country cousin named Robert also lived with them. He had come to the city to "make his fortune" and he worked as Rachel's father's assistant in the cloth trade. Robert and Rachel did not get along very well, but Rachel realized that Robert was the best hope for her father's being able to remain successful in business. Rachel's mother was rather flighty and kept the father constantly worried about how she spent money trying to keep up socially with more prosperous acquaintances.

The times were troubled. King Charles had been beheaded the very day Rachel was born. At the time the story takes place, Oliver Cromwell, who had executed the King, was no longer in power. The English were fearful that they were going to be invaded by the Dutch. A terrible disease was just starting up among the poorer inhabitants. As the disease spread, it was called "The Plague." It tended to kill most people who caught it, as they turned a black color with large bleeding sores on their skin. In fact, in some places it was called "the Black Death." Nobody knew what caused the disease, and nobody knew how to begin to cure it or to stop its spread. Some of the cures that were attempted were almost as bad as the disease.

People had to go on and live their regular lives as much as they could with more and more people dying around them as weeks went by. Wagonloads of dead bodies were pulled through the streets to be buried in mass graves. The wealthier people left the city, hoping that the plague would not follow them to the less populated parts of the country.

Against the backdrop of political unrest and the spread of the plague, Rachel's family struggles to hold on to the business and lead as normal lives as possible. Rachel comes to suspect that one of her father's competitors is trying to bankrupt her father and take over his business. But she needs to find proof, since no one, especially her mother, will believe her suspicions. On top of everything else, Robert suddenly disappears without leaving any trace.

Along with Rachel, we start to worry about who next will be taken by the plague. How will the family survive? What happened to Robert, and will he ever return to help save the family business?

 

 


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