Great Middle Grade Reads discussion

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Pax
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BOTM for January is Pax
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SaraKat
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rated it 3 stars
Jan 03, 2021 09:03AM

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I read this a couple of years ago. I'll be interested to see what others think, and will share my review later in the month.


Me too! :)
I've had Pax on and off my TBR for years, and in fact, now I have a copy in my hands, I'm surprised to find it only came out in 2016. And that's partly because it seems really old-fashioned.
I'm really struggling to want to read on, for all sorts of reasons, and I'm only about one-third in.
I'm really struggling to want to read on, for all sorts of reasons, and I'm only about one-third in.


The author gives the impression of having researched foxes very well, the way we get inside the head of Pax. It reminded me of A Wolf Called Wander, which I thought was done a little better, but Pax has the addition of human friendship and his thoughts about humans. I liked the parts about Pax best.
The undefined place and time were rather distracting to me, though, and the war seemed unrealistic because I couldn't imagine the scope of it--it seemed very localized. If the reader understood that the war was the Civil War, for example, or World War II, all that would be needed would be that bit of info and even a child reader could fill in at least a sketchy idea of what was going on.
There were some beautiful parts when Peter is with Vola, but I was sometimes pulled out of the story by the random or far-fetched nature of some of the events.
After promising to share my review, I realize that I never reviewed the book. I have to say that I mostly had the same criticisms that Maria did. For me, the undefined setting didn't work well, and while I've no objections to anthropomorphized animals a la Wind in the Willows, I found the fox to be portrayed as having much too human thoughts.
ETA: on the other hand, the book made enough of an impression that I remember it almost 3 years later.
ETA: on the other hand, the book made enough of an impression that I remember it almost 3 years later.
I got over the worst of it, but really, I couldn't engage with the rest. I liked Vola, on the whole.
The main problems for me were:
1) normalising abandoning pets in the wild - that really waved a red flag, and makes me angry just to type it
2) the lack of setting - what war, between whom, where, when?
The second gave the whole story a lack of coherence for me. There are woods, there are spaces that suggest it's the northern/northeastern US, there are fighters coming in from the west (who, what??) and the resistance is using primitive mines to defend themselves. Is it a dystopia? But the kids are at school practising baseball as usual....
And the story is, pardon me, one we've had before. I know kids like the predictable, but...
Why did this book gain awards? I'd have understood if it had been written in the 1950s.
My three stars is generous. I did like Vola.
The main problems for me were:
1) normalising abandoning pets in the wild - that really waved a red flag, and makes me angry just to type it
2) the lack of setting - what war, between whom, where, when?
The second gave the whole story a lack of coherence for me. There are woods, there are spaces that suggest it's the northern/northeastern US, there are fighters coming in from the west (who, what??) and the resistance is using primitive mines to defend themselves. Is it a dystopia? But the kids are at school practising baseball as usual....
And the story is, pardon me, one we've had before. I know kids like the predictable, but...
Why did this book gain awards? I'd have understood if it had been written in the 1950s.
My three stars is generous. I did like Vola.

The main problems for me were:
1) normalising abandoning pets in the wild - that really waved..."
How did it normalize abandoning pets in the wild? It seemed like the whole thing was about the guilt that abandoning Pax induced in Peter and how he realized he should never have done it.
Maria wrote: "How did it normalize abandoning pets in the wild?..."
It's not about Peter, it's about Pax.
No attempt to rehome Pax in any way.
Father says Pax is wild and will cope.
Pax copes.
Father justified in abandoning pet in forest.
So the message that people believe is the one they want to believe - it's okay to abandon animals in the wild, they'll cope.
They don't.
If Peter had found Pax half-starved, riddled with lice, dragging his foot from being attacked by a predator, and needing his eye removed because it's ulcerated from a bramble scratch, it would be more realistic. Those are typical problems for pets found abandoned in the wild.
Please support your animal shelters, they are being swamped in lockdown.
It's not about Peter, it's about Pax.
No attempt to rehome Pax in any way.
Father says Pax is wild and will cope.
Pax copes.
Father justified in abandoning pet in forest.
So the message that people believe is the one they want to believe - it's okay to abandon animals in the wild, they'll cope.
They don't.
If Peter had found Pax half-starved, riddled with lice, dragging his foot from being attacked by a predator, and needing his eye removed because it's ulcerated from a bramble scratch, it would be more realistic. Those are typical problems for pets found abandoned in the wild.
Please support your animal shelters, they are being swamped in lockdown.

(It's a little muddled by the fact that Pax is not a domesticated pet, but a wild animal raised as a pet. It's kind of like the author is trying to say both, "don't abandon pets" and "let wild animals be wild" at the same time.)
I never thought I would be pushed to finally start this one by being snowed in for 3 days in South Texas. I enjoyed the relationship between Vola and Peter. I could've read a whole book about just that. :) But the rest of the book left me trying to suspend disbelief too much to enjoy it. I agree with Maria that the fact that he is a wild animal kind of changes things as to the abandonment aspect. But the reader is shown that it is a terrible thing to do and that abandoning pets is wrong throughout the book, so I don't think anyone is going to get the message that it's okay to abandon a pet from this one. I also agree that the weird war and indeterminate time period are very distracting. The anthropomorphic behavior of the foxes was off-putting as well. They knew what a military transport vehicle and road blocks were! I also don't really care for the amount of animal violence shown in the book. It was graphic and not my cup of tea.

What I like about this book is the personal growth, not just the main characters, but in all the characters. Peter's mentor is a war veteran. I like the way her relationship with Peter developed.
If there was one thing I would change, it would be the vague location. As for the ending, I would have preferred a few more lines to tie up all the ends. For example I liked it when Pax met his mentor, but more could be said about his mentor's partner in the later part of the story. I'd also like to see some closure with Peter's father and grandfather.