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Summerland
 
 

Summerland (Hardcover)

~ (Author) "ETHAN SAID, "I hate baseball..." (more)
Key Phrases: ferisher chief, steam sledge, gray crinkles, Clam Island, Grim the Giant, Mooseknuckle John (more...)
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (139 customer reviews)


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  School & Library Binding, January 31, 2004 $19.60 $19.60 --
  Hardcover, September 16, 2002 -- $2.90 $0.01
  Paperback, January 31, 2004 $8.95 $3.42 $0.01
  Audio, CD, Unabridged $30.36 $12.99 $6.49

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

In Summerland, his first novel for young readers, Pulitzer Prize-winning author Michael Chabon attempts an American Narnia. Inspired by Lewis and Tolkien, he's created his own magical landscape on which to paint a sweeping fantasy quest, but mixes the same ingredients--folklore and new inventions--in a distinctively American way.

The plot is simple and pure, but takes a long time to tell. The setting is Clam Island, Washington, specifically the area on the western tip of the island known as the Summerlands, which enjoys zero rainfall and yearlong fine weather. Ethan Feld, a self-described really bad ball player, is recruited by a 100-year-old scout called Mr. Chiron "Ringfinger" Brown. Ethan is needed to help the ferishers, essentially fairies, to save their world from eradication. On the great infinite tree of worlds, Summerland is on the boundary between two such worlds, and a particularly destructive fairy called Coyote and his band of warriors are nearby and threatening to destroy everything.

Heroes are desperately needed to counter this threat, and their journey involves a lot of baseball, but also encounters with giants, bat-winged goblins, sea monsters, and assorted cunning magic. The novel features an ensemble cast of equal parts that shine and fade in turn, and yet the undoubtedly fine writing fails to mask the enormity and complexities of the world in which they travel, and the bad guys getting their comeuppance always seems so far away. Readers need to savor every word in Summerland to extract the best flavors from it. (Ages 10 and older.) --John McLay, Amazon.co.uk



From Publishers Weekly

In his debut novel for young readers, Pulitzer Prize winner Chabon (The Adventures of Kavalier & Clay) hits a high-flying home run, creating a vivid fantasy where baseball is king. Following the death of his mother, 11-year-old Ethan Feld and his father, a designer of lighter-than-air-dirigibles move to Clam Island, Wash. The island is known for its almost constant rain, save for an area on its westernmost tip called Summerland by the locals which "knew a June, July and August that were perfectly dry and sunshiny." In Summerland, Ethan struggles to play baseball for the Ruth's Fluff and Fold Roosters, with dismal results. But here, too, a mystical baseball scout recruits Ethan and escorts him through a gateway to a series of interconnected worlds that are home to magical creatures called ferishers and an evil, shape-changing overlord called Coyote. Ethan and two of his fellow teammates soon accept a mission to save these other worlds (plus the one they live in) from ultimate destruction at Coyote's hand. When his father's well-being is also threatened, Ethan's quest becomes all the more urgent. To succeed, Ethan and his friends must find a way to beat giants, ferishers and others in a series of games where striking out truly has apocalyptic implications. Chabon unspools an elaborate yarn in a style that frequently crackles with color and surprise. He occasionally addresses readers directly, imbuing his tale with the aura of something that has been passed down through the ages. Impressively, the author takes a contemporary smalltown setting and weaves in baseball history, folklore and environmental themes, to both challenge and entertain readers. Images of the icy Winterlands and beasts like the werefox and Taffy the motherly Sasquatch recall C.S. Lewis's Narnia and some of Philip Pullman's creations in His Dark Materials. Devotees of the genre and of America's pastime will find much to cheer here. All ages.
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Reading level: Ages 9-12
  • Hardcover: 500 pages
  • Publisher: Miramax; 1 edition (September 16, 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0786808772
  • ISBN-13: 978-0786808779
  • Product Dimensions: 8.6 x 5.7 x 1.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.6 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (139 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #628,029 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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Customer Reviews

139 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.8 out of 5 stars (139 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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69 of 78 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Michael Chabon hits a homerun with "Summerland", September 18, 2002
By D. Bakken "dobak" (Minneapolis, MN) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
I have been a fan of Michael Chabon for a few years now and was very happy to see he was writing a book for a juvenile audience.

Summerland is the tale of a young boy in modern day Washington state who is quite possibly the worst baseball player around. Ethan lives on a small island that features an are of it that never gets rain. Therefore, baseball is very popular with Ethan and his friends.

What nobody knows is that this area, known as Summerland, is also a portal/rift to other dimensions. When extra-dimensional beings start causing problems and kidnap Ethans inventor/engineer father to help them destroy the tree that links all the worlds, Ethan and his friends must band together to save the world/worlds.

Chabon introduces the reader to some of the most inventive characters Ive read ever. When these characters are combined with beautifully described foreign worlds and the great American sport of baseball. The result is pure magic.

Highly Recommended for Kids and Adults

10 stars!

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49 of 56 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Not really for adults, and derivative of Gaiman, September 21, 2002
Ok I give it 3 stars, but that was with high expectations. A first time author would have got 4 stars.

This might be a great book for kids (really precocious well-read kids), but as an adult, it wasn't really for me (although I did read and enjoy the Harry Potter books, so I am probably part of Miramax's target market).

If you have read Neil Gaiman's American Gods (or Sandman series) -- you will immediately feel like you are on old ground here. Chabon does exactly the same trick -- He explores various American myths and legends, but couched in a framework of Norse Mythology. Thus, just as in American Gods we have Loki, and Ragnorok (here Ragged Rock) and various American icons, Paul Bunyan, John Henry, Billy the Kid, that kind of thing. And since Chabon is a professed comic geek, I expect he has read Gaiman as well, so I hold him somewhat culpable.

The difference -- this story is told from the perspective of an 11 year old boy -- sort of American Gods meets Harry Potter (or The Talisman).

Fine...it is a quick read, and Chabon is still a great writer-- but the book seemed to me to be written in haste, and his plotting felt messy and haphazard: for example some of the minor characters such as Cutbelly and Thor seem to be entirely mutable, changing their allegiances and personalities throughout the book, until you have no sense of them at all. Transitions were frequently abrupt, as if the author just wanted to get on to his next idea.

Far be it from me to belittle the considerable gifts of Michael Chabon -- Kavalier and Klay was one of the most exceptional books I have read in recent memory, (and he did win the Pulitzer Prize, after all). But part of what made that novel so delightful was that Chabon did not turn down the volume on his vocabulary and erudition, even when traipsing through the backyard of such beloved juvenalia as comic books. And since that book was essentially using comic books as a trope, some of the one dimensional characters and sudden transitions made sense. But in Summerland it doesn't work as well.

I thought Chabon was best in Summerland when he was writing about baseball (which is clearly another passion of his). The first chapter, for example, was terrific. Its too bad he didn't keep the magic and mythology solely to that subject.

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16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A coming of age fantasy baseball quest, October 22, 2003
By Jack Fitzgerald "JFD" (Seattle, WA United States) - See all my reviews
  
"Summerland" is Michael Chabon's entry into the youth fantasy genre, and it's not a bad read, but I would really call it an adult's kid book. It's not "Harry Potter" or "The Thief Lord" which are geared toward a youth market.
The story is set on fictitious Clam Island in Washington state's San Juan islands, where there is a place on the western side of the island that never sees rain during the summer. This is Summerland, and it is where the local little league teams play their games.
An eleven year old boy on one of the teams, Ethan Feld, is not much of a ballplayer, but he's friends with Jennifer T. Rideout, one of the best players on the team. There's also Thor Wignutt, a player who thinks he's an android and talks like Data from Star Trek. One day Ethan begins having strange visions of bushbabies near the field and on the roadside. The creature is actually a werefox named Cutbelly, and meeting him is the beginning of Ethan's adventure.
Ethan's father is an inventer and tinkerer who has come up with a material used in a portable blimp that they fly around the island. It turns out that a certain character wants to use the material to hold a substance so that he can bring about the end of the world. Once Mr. Feld is kidnapped, it's up to Ethan, his friends, and an odd assortment of characters that they meet along the way, to save the day.
It's kind of like "The Lord of the Rings" meets "The Bad News Bears" with a liberal dose of random mythologies thrown in for spice.
For example, we have the "ferishers" who are dimunitive creatures (faeries?) that excell at baseball and scampering between the various world/dimensions known as the summerlands, the winterlands, and the middling (our world) with the gleaming as the great world shut off from the rest. The ferishers call humans "reubens" or "rubes." It's a takeoff on a greenhorn ballplayer.
The end of the world is called "Ragged Rock" which comes from the Norse mythology "Ragnarok."
And, the antagonist is Coyote, popular in Native American lore and akin to Loki, a trickster and master of change. Coyote also invented baseball, and Chabon uses baseball both literally and metaphorically to move the story forward.
I liked the blending of the various mythologies, especially the sequence involving Ethan's team playing against a team made up of the "liars" which are characters from tall tales like John Henry, Paul Bunyan, etc.
Ethan must save his father, and the world as well, while developing his new position of catcher and dealing with an unfinished magical "bat" made from an ash wood branch taken from the great tree of the universe. There's another link in that baseball bats are made from ash and this type of wood allegedly holds magical properties.
Jennifer must develop into a pitcher, and deal with some of her family issues.
I enjoyed the story, but I'm not sure if kids in the 12-15 age group will grasp all of the literary subtleties, but then again maybe so. I enjoyed Chabon's use of the language and thought the story was well-told, although the characters did not always come off as wholy sympathetic. If you like baseball and fantasy, and are looking for an escape, this is a pleasant read.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

3.0 out of 5 stars Harry Potter for baseball fans
This book just didn't do it for me. I don't like fantasy very much to begin with, but I've really liked Chabon's other books. Read more
Published 4 months ago by Avid Reader

5.0 out of 5 stars Very Enjoyable Book
Quite simply this is a very enjoyable book. Its structure is a well woven blend of ancient and modern myths and legends, primarily fairies and baseball; that is, the summer... Read more
Published 12 months ago by Christine & Ethan Rose

5.0 out of 5 stars For Young and Old
This is a fun read. Chabon is a true literary talent, and in Summerland he sets aside the complicated, down-to-earth troubles of humans and their relationships for a charming... Read more
Published 15 months ago by R. Perry Hooker

4.0 out of 5 stars A very creative take on real heroes
Heroes are born of circumstance. Ordinary people are called upon to be extraordinary and they answer the call despite overwhelming mortal threat and no chance of a material... Read more
Published 17 months ago by Secret Reader

5.0 out of 5 stars Forget that it's Chabon we're talking about.
I picked up this book when it first came out, quite unaware as to who exactly Michael Chabon was, and therefore, held no expectations of what to expect. Read more
Published 18 months ago by Maria Moutsoglou

5.0 out of 5 stars Great Book for Young at Heart
I loved this book. I read it twice, originally getting it for my kids to read. I loved the imaginary world, the baseball stuff, the characters and the wackiness of the plot... Read more
Published 23 months ago by Eileen M. Klees

4.0 out of 5 stars The magic of baseball
Ethan Felds is the worst player on his baseball team, and everyone knows it. In spite of this, he finds himself drawn into a struggle to save the universe, travelling in an... Read more
Published on November 13, 2007 by Andrew W. Johns

3.0 out of 5 stars 3-1/2 Stars: A Fanciful Romp, Engaging and Imaginative
An intriguing mix of Beowolf, Native American lore and baseball, "Summerland" is the coming-of-age story of Ethan Feld. Read more
Published on November 6, 2007 by DCArchitect

4.0 out of 5 stars Forget werewolves. How about werechipmunks?
To say that Summerland is a quirky novel would be an understatement. First of all, it is marketed as a book equally suitable for adults and `young readers', and somehow it does... Read more
Published on October 23, 2007 by Vincent Smullen

5.0 out of 5 stars Fantastic writing and depth of concept
The requisite metaphor here would be something about hitting it out of the park - instead I'll simply say that this wonderfully told yarn enthralled not just me but also two... Read more
Published on October 13, 2007 by J. Granholm

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