This
month's book reviews
A February
readers' bonus
In celebration of Black History Month, YSL.com
has two lists of special African-American books. Click
here. |
A
dog gets himself and his new owner in trouble
William's
mom and dad were divorced. His grandfather, who was William's
best friend along with being a grandpa, had just died two
months earlier. To help William's loneliness, his mom had
told him she would take him to the pound to pick out a dog
to bring home. She thought William would pick a middle-sized
dog. Instead William fell in love with a big friendly Labrador-collie
mix, named Riley. When William brought Riley home, the dog
seemed like the perfect pet and companion. He was smart and
seemed well-trained. When out of school, William spent all
of his time with Riley. He even slipped Riley into bed at
night so they could sleep together.
Nest door to William's
family lived an elderly widow named Peachie. She and William
had been good friends since William was real little. She even
called him "Sweet William" after a type of flowers
that grew in her garden Peachie had an old race horse named
Sultan as a pet. Sultan as a young horse had been a great
race horse, wining many races for Peachie and her now deceased
husband. She loved the horse and was trying to provide a happy
and comfortable old age for him.
William had to
take Riley over to Peachie's house and show her his new pet.
To his horror, when Riley saw Sultan, the dog took out after
the old horse. Nothing William could do would stop the dog.
The feeble old horse tried to run but collapsed on the ground
and it appeared he might die from the fear and exertion. The
veterinarian was called and managed to keep Sultan alive.
However, Peachie and the vet pointed out that by state law
dogs that chased farm animals like cows and horses were supposed
to be destroyed. Peachie was so angry, she reported Riley
to the county animal officer. Riley was taken back to the
pound. A county board would decide if and when Riley had to
be killed.
William and his
friend Grace decided to run a campaign to gain public support
to save Riley from being put to death. They wrote letters,
made signs, and passed out printed flyers in an effort to
save Riley. Although a few people were sympathetic, public
opinion seemed to be against them. Can these kids save Riley?
Will William and Peachie ever become good friends again? Is
there some kind of solution that will satisfy both sides in
the dispute? You should enjoy reading "The Summer of
Riley" while finding out the answers.
A
young girl provides stories for
the Shahrazad, the Sultan's wife
Most
of us have heard the story of "A Thousand and One Nights."
A powerful Sultan has been betrayed by one of his wives. He
is so angry, he had all of the wives in his harem executed
along with their servants. He decreed that, thereafter, he
would spend one night with any new wives and have them executed
the next day. Shahrazad, a young woman, was brought in to
be one of his new wives. She had the idea to tell the Sultan
a story each night that would make him want to hear the next
part on the following night. As long as she told him stories
that entertained him and kept him wanting to hear more, she
and the other wives in the harem could stay alive.
In the book, "Shadow
Spinner," a crippled young girl named Marjan has become
a story teller herself. She admires the famous Queen Shahrazad,
but never expects to meet her. However, on a business trip
with her guardian to the Sultan's palace, Marjan tells stories
to some of the children there. To Marjan's surprise, she is
summoned before Shahrazad. The Sultan's wife is starting to
run out of stories. She asked Marjan's help in pulling together
the parts of an old story. She knows the Sultan vaguely remembers
this particular one from his childhood and wants to hear it
again in its entirety. Marjan and Shahrazad are aware the
story and the characters' names have to be accurate or the
Sultan will be angry and go back to executing his wives.
"Shadow Spinner"
is a retelling of the old Arabian Nights tale and is told
through the eyes of an orphaned young crippled girl. The author
adds new characters and much detail that cannot be found in
the old tale.
A
young girl is charged with the murder
of her older sister's ex-boyfriend
Dovey
Coe is a twelve-year-old who lives with her family on a mountain
side near Indian Creek, North Carolina. There are Coes in
the town cemetery with headstones dating back to 1844. Dovey
is a tomboy who loves the out-of-doors and likes to do mechanical
repairs with her father who is the local fix-it man. Dovey's
mother is always encouraging Dovey to be more ladylike. Dovey
has a strikingly beautiful older sister, sixteen-year-old
Caroline. Amos, her thirteen-year-old brother, although deaf
from infancy, is a fun-loving outdoorsman. Because of his
deafness, Amos had never gone to school, since the small town
had no special classes for kids like him.
Parnell Caraway
is the spoiled son of the richest family in Indian Creek.
He is seventeen, has plenty of spending money, and drives
his own car. He has a history of doing mean things to the
other kids around the town, but because he is from a well-to-do
family, is nice-looking, and has a car, plenty of girls in
town wish he would ask them for dates. But Parnell has decided
he wants to marry Caroline and spends the summer hanging around
the Coe house trying to convince Caroline and her family that
he would make a good husband for her.
Dovey knows that
the Parnell's nice-guy personality is only an act . She hates
it that Caroline as well as her mom and dad seem to encourage
Parnell to keep coming around. Besides, Caroline has applied
for teacher's college and her father has already paid for
her to go away to college in the fall.
The whole situation
comes to a head when Caroline holds a going-away-to-college
party in the late summer. Parnell tries to turn it into an
engagement party by putting a ring on Caroline's finger while
standing in front of the large group of guests. When Caroline
rejects him by refusing the ring, Dovey knows that there will
be real trouble for the Coe family. And, of course, there
is.
The mystery within
the story is did Dovey really kill Parnell. She certainly
had a reason to do so and she was found unconscious with her
open pocketknife in the room with his dead body. Almost everybody
in town thinks she killed Parnell. Will the young inexperienced
lawyer sent to defend Dovey in court be able to save her from
going to prison? If Dovey didn't do it, who did? Maybe you
can figure out the answer by the end of the book.
Troublesome
brother and sister leave
orphanage for home in Ruby Holler
The
Boxton Creek Home for Children was run by Mr. And Mrs. Tripid,
who really didn't like children. The orphanage housed about
a dozen orphans at any one time. The intent was that kids
moved through the home as they were picked up by foster parents
or, occasionally, adopted into new families. The twins, Dallas
and his sister Florida, had been in the home for years. They
had been placed in different foster homes, but had always
been returned as too troublesome to keep. Mr. And Mrs. Tripid,
who believed in lots of rules to keep children quiet and controlled,
were afraid that nobody would ever show up to take the twins
to a new home. Dallas and Florida were kept in back rooms
so that they wouldn't be a "bad influence" on the
rest of the kids.
The twins spent
many hours in "the Thinking Corner", a damp, dark
cobwebbed corner of the basement. Outside, beyond the home
the two could hear the wail of freight trains moving through
town. They planned to run away and jump on the night freight
train and start a new life free of the orphanage. To their
surprise, an elderly white-haired couple, Mr. Tiller Morey
and his wife Sairy, showed up one day and wanted to take the
kids home with them. Because the kids had such bad experiences
with previous attempts at foster home placements, they were
distrustful of going home with the Morey's. They decided that
they could still run away and ride off on a freight train
if things didn't work out.
The kids were
impressed when they reached the pleasant little house in Ruby
Holler. The Moreys didn't yell at them when the kids did stupid
or clumsy things. The food was the best the kids had ever
eaten. They weren't ordered to do work, but asked if they
would like to help with certain jobs. They were paid real
money for some of the chores they did help out with. The twins
were allowed to run around and explore the woods and hills
around Ruby Holler. The two stayed suspicious and mistrustful,
but they were gradually coming to love the Morey's and their
new life.
The plot gets
more complicated when Tiller and Florida take a river trip
and Sairy and Dallas plan a long hike in the woods. While
they are gone from Ruby Holler, the bad guys, Mr. Tripid and
a character named "Z", sneak in and try to find
and steal the Morey's money which had been hidden over the
years. Tiller and Florida almost drown on their river trip
and Sairy and Dallas get lost in the woods. If you want to
know how it all turns out, you need to read the book.