From Publishers Weekly
The author of Hero of Lesser Causes and Adam and Eve and Pinch Me offers a leisurely paced coming-of-age novel tinged with mystery. In the summer of 1904, Fred Dickinson, a 16-year-old Canadian, sets out with his two younger brothers and sister for their annual vacation at their grandparents' lakeside cottage. Still missing his mother, who died three years ago, Fred is relieved to escape his overbearing and critical father, who, Fred declares, "finds it too nerve-wracking to have me stuttering and stumbling around him all day." Through carefully mapped scenes, Johnston traces Fred's maturation as he rescues various siblings from danger, receives a first, painful lesson in love and discovers the truth behind the local legend involving a murderous ferryman. The book contains a good deal of action, but its main focus remains on Fred's internal growth. Instead of molding himself to fit his father's rigid expectations, Fred chooses to follow his own path like the migrating geese, who are "curious about their destination, but always moving forward, taking the right direction by instinct." A subtle, beautifully polished work. Ages 11-up.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
From School Library Journal
Grade 7 Up-A coming-of-age story set in Canada in 1904. The eldest of four siblings, Fred Dickinson, 16, is a disappointment to his demanding, often cruel father. The teen is shy, introspective, and small for his age, and has a severe stutter; all of these factors contribute to his self-doubts. In addition, he still grieves over the sudden death of his mother a few years before. Fortunately, Fred does have the love and respect of his two younger brothers and his sister. When the youngsters go off to spend six weeks at their grandparents' summer cottage, it proves to be a turning point in Fred's life. He falls in love for the first time and finally feels a real sense of who he is. In the outdoors, he realizes how he wants to live his life. Of course, his father understands nothing. He expects his son to be sensible and take the job he has arranged for him in the city. Father and son never entirely resolve their conflicts, but they do eventually come to an understanding. Fred grows considerably over the summer and faces the future with a new sense of optimism. Johnston's characters are fully drawn, vivid, and always believable. The author incorporates enough adventure and humor to keep the plot moving and creates a strong sense of time and place. As adolescent fiction goes, this novel is relatively quiet and gentle. Yet, readers who are embroiled in their own conflicts with family and self will appreciate it.
Edward Sullivan, New York Public LibraryCopyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
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