This
month's book reviews
Six
kids are shipwrecked on an uncharted
island with a left over atomic bomb
The set-up for
this story is that six kids in their early teens are on kind
of a "shape up" cruise for kids that have been in
varying kinds of trouble. The cruise ship is caught in a violent
storm and sinks. The kids manage to make it to a small Pacific
island that doesn't show up on any maps. The island is covered
with tropical vegetation and contains some abandoned military
buildings left over from World War II. The war had ended in
1945, fifty-six years earlier. By accident, the kids discover
an old bomb had been left behind when the soldiers and sailors
went home at the war's end. The bomb looks just like pictures
of the two atomic bombs dropped on Japan to end the war. Just
to add even greater danger to the situation, the kids find
that vicious smugglers are using the island to trade in illegal
goods. In fact, one of the kids is shot and seriously wounded
by accident when the smugglers are randomly firing their guns.
Much of the story
shows how these kids with widely differing personalities come
to depend on one another to survive in a not too friendly
environment. The title of the paperback is "Island, book
three, Escape." The little book is the third and concluding
volume of a three part series. Because it summarizes what
went on before this book takes up the story, it stands on
its own. On the other hand, if you think you like the story
line, you may want to purchase all three of the inexpensive
paperbacks and read them in the proper order. If the other
two are like "Island, book three, Escape", a reader
will experience plenty of suspense and excitement.
If
you like stories with guns, bows and arrows, Indians, and
outlaws, this is a book for you
"Tucket's
Home" by Gary Paulson is a western and pioneer adventure
story set in the pre-Civil War period. It is the fifth and
concluding book of a paperback series about the yearlong travels
of Francis Tucket as he tries to find his family after being
kidnapped from a wagon train by Pawnees. Francis had just
turned fourteen when he was separated from his family, which
was traveling to Oregon along the Oregon Trail. With the help
of a friendly mountain man named Jason Grimes, he escapes
from the Indians. Jason Grimes teaches Francis how to survive
on the trail. Soon, Francis is involved in one dangerous adventure
after another.
At the beginning
of this fifth book, Francis has picked up two traveling companions,
ten-year-old Lottie and eight-year-old Billy, a brother and
sister who had been traveling with another wagon train. They
had been with their father who when he caught the deadly disease,
Cholera, and was left to die along the trail by other members
of the wagon train. After discovering the orphaned children,
Francis felt responsible for helping them go west with him.
Young as the two kids are, each of them develops skills that
help all three of the group survive on the journey westward.
There are some
shocking scenes in the book as the kids meet fellow travelers,
only to find their new friends later murdered by a roaming
band of ex-soldiers turned into killers. How the kids cope
with danger and become more and more self-reliant makes up
the main part of the story. A reader is kept wondering right
up to the last minute whether the kids will ever find a safe
home.
If you like just
a little bit of history and just a little bit of geography
mixed with a whole lot of adventure, the Tucket books are
books you should consider reading.
History
and mystery combine on
the Colorado frontier in 1867
Emma Henderson
lost her father in the last days of the Civil War. He had
been a small newspaper editor and publisher in Chicago before
he went to war. Emma's mother had worked with her husband
in running the newspaper. She thought she had learned enough
to accept an offer to start a newspaper in a small town in
Colorado. Emma wasn't happy to be leaving her friends and
the comforts of home to travel to an unknown place. However,
she had promised her father as he left for war that she would
help her mother if something happened to him. As they were
preparing for their journey, Emma heard someone whistling
her father's favorite tune, just as he whistled it. The mysterious
whistler is the source of the name of the book, "Whistler
in the Dark."
In Colorado, Emma
and her mother found nothing was like it had been promised.
The founder of the town had lied about the size of the town,
the existence of a church and school, and about providing
a home and a newspaper print shop. In addition, it became
clear that someone didn't want a newspaper in town. To add
to her fears, Emma heard the mysterious stranger whistling
her father's tune outside the window of the boarding house.
Had he followed them from Chicago just to keep them from staying
in Colorado?
Emma's mother
was a strong and independent woman, but she was almost ready
to give up. Emma became angry enough to encourage her mother
to fight against the odds and work to publish a successful
newspaper. Events get complicated, but luckily there are good
people to help Emma and her mother fight against whoever it
was that was trying to drive them out of town. Once you get
involved with Emma's efforts to find out who is sabotaging
her and her mother, you can't wait to see how it all turns
out.
Monkeys,
of all things, plague a young
Oklahoma homesteader in the 1890's
Jay Berry is
a fourteen-year-old boy in family of homesteaders trying to
farm in southeastern Oklahoma. He and his twin sister, Daisy,
live with their parents. Daisy has difficulty walking because
of a deformed leg. Her parents have been told that Daisy's
leg problem could be corrected with surgery, but they are
unable to save enough money to afford it. In spite of her
disability, Daisy remains cheerful and surprisingly active.
To complete the picture, Jay's grandparents run a general
store not too many miles from where Jay and his family live.
When his chores
are done, Jay along with his hound dog, Rowdy, roam around
the surrounding countryside. The densely wooded river bottomland
is especially interesting to Jay. His mother doesn't like
him to go there, because it is so swampy and easy to get lost
in. On one of his jaunts, Jay is astonished when he sees what
appear to be monkeys. His parents laugh at him and think that
he must be mistaken. When Jay tells his grandfather about
what he saw, however, his grandfather had an explanation.
He'd read that a traveling circus had lost thirty monkeys,
or more correctly, twenty-nine little monkeys and a chimpanzee,
or "big monkey." He had also read that the circus
was willing to pay two dollars reward for each monkey captured
and a whole $100 for the "big monkey."
Jay can't believe
his good fortune. He was about to be rich! Now he could buy
the pony and the new rifle that he had always wanted. All
he had to do was catch the monkeys and turn them over for
the reward. Boy, was he in for a shock! Every idea that he
and his grandfather came up with to catch the monkeys failed.
Clearly, the chimpanzee or "big monkey" was too
smart to get caught or to let any of his little monkey friends
get captured. You have to read the book, "The Summer
of the Monkeys" by Wilson Rawls, to find out if the monkeys
were ever caught, and, if they were, how it was done. On the
other hand, you just might have seen the Disney Video of the
same name to see how it all turned out.