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The Oxboy
 
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The Oxboy [Paperback]

Anne Mazer (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Book Description

9 and up4 and up
The award-winning allegorical fantasy about a boy who is half ox, half-human-now in paperback for the first time. An ALA Notable Book; a Notable Children's Trade Book in the Field of Social Studies. "No one can tell that I am the son of an ox. Like my father, I am hardworking, and I have a stubborn, tenacious nature. But so do many pure humans..." In the mythic past, when people and animals lived side by side, were friends, married and had offspring, the oxboy would have been accepted and safe. But now he is an outcast and must hide his true identity-or die. Anne Mazer's stunning allegorical fantasy examines our relationship with nature-and our feelings about our own natures-as it reveals and challenges our deepest prejudices.

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Editorial Reviews

From Booklist

Gr. 5-7. Part fairy tale, part allegory, this spare, lyrical story has elements of Beauty and the Beast as well as chilling echoes of contemporary bigotry. Once, a long time ago, men and women married animals. Human society now teaches that such pairings were evil, degrading, unnatural; everyone must preserve the purity of the human race. But the oxboy knows otherwise: he's learned that diversity is enriching, that each species brings unique gifts and understanding. While his mother is human, his father is an ox who's been driven into hiding. Oxboy must keep his secret from the purity police, his spying neighbors, and the kids at school. He finds that he's not the only one who hides scales or fur or tails, that there are fugitives in the street around him as well as in the forest. Inevitably, he is discovered and imprisoned, until his father comes for him and they ride away together. Mazer writes with poetic restraint about the glory of pushing boundaries to understand the "language of stones and stars and moss and roses." Just as powerful is her dramatization of the fear and contempt that shut people into apartheid. The haunting dust jacket by Stasys Eidrigevicius shows a boy wearing a sad, beautiful mask that is part human, part ox. Hazel Rochman --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

From Kirkus Reviews

The form of Mazer's second novel--a stark fable concerning the intermarriage of people and animals--is in striking contrast to the contemporary school-and-neighborhood story in Moose Street (1992), yet its theme is the same: the effects of intolerance. In a preindustrial setting resembling Middle Europe, animals have a nobility that's notably absent in humans who, by custom and decree, abhor them--though many humans mate with the animals. If detected, they and their offspring are summarily executed; still, the ``mixed-bloods'' are everywhere, even among the viciously self-righteous oppressors. When the oxboy's human mother falls under suspicion, his splendid ox father retreats to the forest, still keeping a protective eye on his family. The mother remarries; the boy passes for human, though his best friend is a ``mixed-blood'' who resembles an otter. When the otter is found out and killed, the boy is imprisoned for consorting with him. Mazer's world is incompletely imagined: the father's life in the forest, or why the mother didn't escape to him in the beginning, as the boy does in the end, is not explained. But this allegorical world is compelling (the reference to Jews is obvious, but the tale's meaning is far more universal). A provocative, unusually imaginative tale. (Fiction. 9-14) -- Copyright ©1993, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Product Details

  • Reading level: Ages 9 and up
  • Paperback: 105 pages
  • Publisher: Persea Books; 1st Pbk. Ed edition (May 2000)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0892552409
  • ISBN-13: 978-0892552405
  • Product Dimensions: 7.2 x 4.5 x 0.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 3.2 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,626,863 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Quite a lot of Anne Mazer's writing education took place while she was unconscious. Her parents wanted desperately to become writers and made themselves get up at 4:00 a.m. Every morning in order to have writing time before their three young children awoke. The first thing Anne heard every day was two big, noisy electric typewriters. The furious sound of typing was her childhood wake-up music. During the day, her parents endlessly discussed ideas, plot, and character, and before she was seven years old, Anne knew about revisions, first and second drafts, and rejection slips. It was like growing up in a twenty four hour, seven day a week writer's boot camp.

In order to escape from her parents' obsession with writing, Anne turned to books. She was an avid reader from an early age and credits her love of reading for her writing career. Her favorite works were fantasy, fairy tales, historical fiction, humor, realistic fiction, and adventure. Her other interests were language, art, history, and science. At the age of twelve, she wanted to be an actress, a ballerina and a nuclear physicist. These careers were rapidly eliminated as she realized that a) she couldn't dance, b) she couldn't act; and c) she hated math.

Although at the time Anne thought writing was nothing but a nuisance, she now considers herself very lucky to have grown up with two aspiring writers. She learned a lot about discipline, perseverance and dedication to a craft from witnessing her parents' struggle. They eventually became successful and award-winning young adult novelists.

It took Anne a long time to figure out that she, too, wanted to be a writer. During early adulthood, she worked as an au pair, a bank teller, a pill bottle labeler, a receptionist, an English tutor, and an administrative assistant, as well as other jobs that she was ill-suited for. She attended three universities, spent several years in Paris, traveled throughout Europe, and worked in Boston and New York City.

Anne's "eureka" moment about writing came while she prepared a research report for one of her bosses. As she lovingly polished each sentence, and meticulously organized the paragraphs, she realized that no one really cared how beautifully she wrote about the latest models of air-conditioners. Except her, of course.

Using her parents' model of daily writing and discipline, she began to write. It took her seven years to publish her first book, a picture book inspired by her then two year old son, Max.

Anne is the mother of an adult son and daughter. Over the last twenty years, she has written over forty-five books for young readers. She has enough ideas to last for another quarter century and hopes that she will be writing for a very long time.

Fun Facts About Anne Mazer

* Her favorite foods are popcorn, rice pudding and blueberries.
* When she was a kid, she would sometimes read up to ten books a day.
* If she had magic powers, she'd choose invisibility.
* She painted the rooms in her house yellow, orange, and violet.
* One of her favorite childhood books was The Twilight of Magic, by Hugh Lofting.
* When Anne was a teenager, her room was so messy that she needed a map to get from the door to the bed. (sort of)
* In school Anne often flunked her favorite creative subjects, like writing and art.


 

Customer Reviews

2 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

3.0 out of 5 stars Well-Written Allegory, October 22, 2011
This review is from: The Oxboy (Paperback)
While The Oxboy is a well-written allegory with an important message, it is not typical Anne Mazer fare. After the hint of conflict in the first chapter, the next two chapters backtrack to tell about how a woman and an ox unite during a time when animals are outcasts. As such, The Oxboy is a slower and more plodding tale than Anne Mazer's other books. Even when the pace picks up in chapter four, because the strange union is discovered and the family is being hunted, the book remains overtly moralistic and dark. Rarely are readers allowed to forget the message of prejudice and cruelty, to the point that The Oxboy rarely receives help from even his fellow animals. There are moments of beauty, especially in the friendship between Oxboy and an otter he rescues, and in the scenic descriptions. For example, the family cottage is described as a sweet-smelling barn, far off the main road, at the end of a tumbled path overgrown with clover and blackberries. Can't you just picture it? While I did like The Oxboy, it lacks the spark and charm I have come to appreciate from Anne Mazer.
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5.0 out of 5 stars A superb fairytale/allegory for readers of all ages., June 4, 2000
This review is from: The Oxboy (Paperback)
This allegory of Beauty and the Beast has been written for juvenile readers but is reviewed here for its interest to adults readers as well: part fairy tale, part allegory, The Oxboy tells of an ox boy who resembles a child but who is born of a strange union between ox and woman. He experiences prejudice and kindness in strange places in a world which can't quite define or hold him.
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