What's the Name of That Book??? discussion

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Query abandoned by poster > ABANDONED. YA book from the 1970's about a boy alone on a farm

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message 1: by Scott (new)

Scott (wildbio) His family died and he adopts a wild dog for company. Possibly gets wounded with an ax.


message 2: by Lobstergirl, au gratin (new)

Lobstergirl | 44924 comments Mod
Scott, I see that you posted this query in 2010 too.

https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...

How about my suggestion in that thread, Wild in the World?


message 3: by bookel (new)

bookel | 4027 comments Spoilers below but it would trigger your memory and solve it once and for all... it sounds like a depressing book!

Kirkus Review for that book:

WILD IN THE WORLD
By John Donovan

After an initial desolation that stretches belief, this becomes a natural and gently persuasive story of an inarticulate mountain boy and the animal that preoccupies his last days. At the book's opening there are three Gridleys left from a family of seven brothers and four sisters; the others have died of scarlet fever, rattlesnake bite, fire, childbirth, suicide, and mysterious illnesses attributed to leaving home. By page six Abraham has died of an infected fishhook cut, Amos is fatally kicked by a cow, and only John, the youngest, survives. This is told matter-of-factly and John accepts his multiple bereavement with fatalistic resignation. He never talked much to his brothers anyway; now his thoughts are of getting the chores done, selling apples, maybe buying a pipe. Then John by chance adopts a stray wolf (or maybe it's a dog) and his life changes. He names the animal Son, swims and eats and works with it, nurses it anxiously through a bout with rattlesnake poisoning when John and the reader are sure the dog will die, talks to it in torrents through his increasing delirium, then dies himself of pneumonia. Children who would cry if the animal died will accept the rightness of John's death; Son clearly enlarged the boy's life in a dimension other than time. Though the seemingly gratuitous deaths are a shock at first, their use to underline the value of the friendship results in a quietly convincing affirmation.
Pub Date: Aug. 25th, 1971
Publisher: Harper & Row




message 4: by Gabs (last edited Jan 10, 2015 08:06PM) (new)

Gabs  | 127 comments The Sign of the Beaver? Though his family is not dead, they are just really far away from the house for a couple months.


message 5: by Lobstergirl, au gratin (new)

Lobstergirl | 44924 comments Mod
Scott left the group. Moving to Abandoned.


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