Animals Books


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Animals Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Animals
Lizard Music
Published in Paperback by Dell Publishing (1978-09-01)
Author: Daniel Pinkwater
List price: $1.25
Used price: $8.82

Average review score:

Lizard Music
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-02
I was so glad to find this book again as I had read it to my sons when they were in grade school. This is a very fun book for children big and small! This was our very first Daniel Pinkwater novel and was the biginning of our lifelong love of his writings. Read this to your children - give it to them to read. ONE disclaimer - if they are already immersed in fantasy then they will have little appreciation of how subtly Pinkwater takes you from known to the absurd to the almost believeable.

This book hooked my kid on reading
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-29
Lizzard Music is the way I got my son Matt to read as a kid. He could read but wasn't at all interested in the boring books he got handed at school. It was like pulling teeth to get him to read. I gave him lizzard music and asked that he read for 1/2 an hour and that was the last I heard from him except for some laughing and every once in a while a "wow! mom this is great!". He didn't put the book down except to eat and sleep until he finished it and then made me go get more Pinkwater books. So basicly my son reads thanks to the humor of the genius that is Daniel Manus Pinkwater!!! Thanks Mr. Pinkwater from moms everywhere

Extremely funny
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-09
A very appealing book, and a favorite from Pinkwater. Good for both boys and girls, especially those looking for something funny and original.

Introduce Your Young Reader To The Wonders Of Drug-Free Tripping!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-13
Manus Pinkwater is a pretty cool kinda guy. He has the unique feature of being as tall sitting as he is standing, and that makes me wonder if the convex dimensions of an author's backside are somehow related to the quantity of his imagination. You see, Manus writes far-out books. No, no, I mean...realllly far-out books. I think he passes the Twilight Zone somewhere in route to where he goes to pen his creative little novels. Lizard Music may take the cake among everything straaaaange he's written, however. This story puts your brain in a food processor and hits frappe. What's it about? Oh, you want to know that, don't you? Okay.

Lizard Music is about a ten-ish young man named Victor, who is left one summer in the early 1970's in the custody of his free-loving teenaged sister, Leslie, when their parents take a summer vacation. Not ten seconds after the parents exeunt stage left Leslie does the same thing, meeting up with some hippie buds and taking off in a van with the warning that Victor better NOT tell on her for this. Hey, Victor's more than happy to oblige. What ten-year-old wouldn't love being left alone with a full frige, a small stack of spending money, and no rules or supervision whatsoever? Victor has the time of his young life. He eats what he wants, he does what he wants, and he stays up as late as he wants watching previously forbidden monster movies. It's this last liberty, the late bedtime, that sends young Victor's life into some veddy odd places. One night, past midnight, Victor is up watching the TV station sign off after the late-late-late show has concluded and right in front of his drowsy eyes he sees the most peculiar program he's ever witnessed: a jazz group composed entirely of man-sized lizards performs a concert in the minutes before the station ceases its signal. That's not to say it's a cartoon or guys in costumes...these appear to be great big lizards playing jazz. The next morning Victor wonders if it was all a dream. (He had after all been hitting the candy and cola a little hard the last couple nights...) To get to the truth, Victor stays up another night to see if it happens again. It does...and something else does too. Let me just say Victor takes a trip that's even weirder than the one his sister is on with her fellow hippies. "LiKe FaaR OuT, dUdE!!!" Lizard Music is the sort of book no one but Pinkwater could have written, no one could possibly figure out before its conclusion, and that no one will quite know what to make of when they've finished reading its mind-altering text.

I Claudia's: Grace
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-04
I remember the night that my grandmother gave me this book. My mom was in the hospital for what would have been her last round of chemo and I had been beaten up in school that day for tucking my pants into my argyle socks in a rather unsporting display involving football players, loose change, and vending machines. Pinkwater's book kept me sane through the sixth grade and then some. There are a whole bunch of physicists in my department who feel the same way. We are very much in debt to the Chickenman and some other friendly phantoms from Bughouse Square and Pinkwater's memory (real or not, we are smart enough as a collective to get back to them).

Animals
The Mole and the Owl
Published in Hardcover by Young Spirit Books (1998-03)
Author: Charles Duffie
List price: $18.95
New price: $7.75
Used price: $2.00
Collectible price: $19.00

Average review score:

True to Life
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-03-14
I could relate to the little mole in the sense my fiancee is 1500 miles from me currently and everyday is a battle to be with her. Fortunately I will get my chance in the next 3 months to be with her but until then I can relate with the mole 100%. Truly a book that may be Fantasy but lives to real human heart.

It's a great book from the first to the last page.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-08-30
A very nice book. It has a great philosophy about love. I enhance other people to read it.

Few books have the rare soul-poetry of expression this does.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-01
I found this little book by accident, visiting somewhere, and read it only because I had nothing else to do at that moment. I don't normally even read much fiction anymore and am not given to sappy love stories.

Yet this book reached in and grabbed my heart like nothing I've ever read. It's the kind of soul-level writing that once in a great while an author is a conduit for... I'm not sure writing at this level is really a brain thing of the person, more an internal thing of the spirit. I can't talk about the plot or the information or things I would normally review in a book. It is just a story; it is a story for a person of any age; it is a better story for those who have ever known love, or known longing, or found themselves the outcast, or found inside themselves the powerful dharma of being what one is as "I AM"... in this case, he was in love.

Not only did the book hold me in a poet/dreamer thrall throughout, and make me cry in sadness and joy, and laugh out loud at many small insights or comments, but hours and even days later, my whole interpretation of my world had more... poetry to it. More color, more eloquence; as if for a time, that love and energy gave ME more poetry; a new way of looking at all things with love. (I know. This is embarrassing. But read in the right state of mind, it's a very cool book.)

I'm buying the book now so I'll have my own copy. I want to suggest to people that I love that they read it. It's like a gift I want to give. I recommend the book very much.

I love this book
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-10-02
This book must be in every house, in every hotel, restaurant, kitchen, bathroom, on the street, school, bus... all over the world. It's a book that goes so near to the heart that I'm smiling and crying together.

love for all
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-18
In a highly conforming and rule-blound world that we live in, people become more and more indifferent. People are caught up with their everyday routines, keeping busy schedules, having little time to what some would say "live". This book is not only about the power of faithful love, but it taught me just how important it is to make decisions that will make us happy and will show what we truly believe in. For those people who believe they have wasted too much of their lives following rules and being afraid of becoming different, for those people who believe that they are capable of a greater love than they can imagine, for those people who believe that they should start "living their lives", then here is a book that sings your song.

Animals
No Matter What
Published in Hardcover by Harcourt Children's Books (1999-09-20)
Author: Debi Gliori
List price: $16.00
New price: $3.47
Used price: $0.22
Collectible price: $16.00

Average review score:

Very cute book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-19
I got this book for my 9 months old boy. We love the illustration and color. Very cute children's book.

Great for Nonconventional families!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-11
We read this book all the time (in the top 3) to our 15-month-old daughter, even though we do have a conventional family. But I wanted to write this review so other people will know that it is a perfect child's book for a non-conventional family.
There is no gender reference to Small. There is no gender reference to Large. There is not even a reference of Large being a parent. There is no reference to any other family member. This would be fabulous for single parents or for guardians who are not "mom" or "dad".

Warm Story, family favorite
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-15
We've had this book for a few years...my children (no 7 and 6) enjoyed this book during their preschool years. The illustrations are wonderful but most of all, the story sends a message of unconditional love. This booked really helped to solidify the message that no matter how much my children were misbehaving, I always loved them and no matter where I was, I always loved them. I highly recommend this book (as I do almost all the Debi Gliori books I've read!).

The sweetest good-night book I know...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-18
This is truly the sweetest good-night book I know -- without being the least bit nauseating. The drawings show the little fox being settled down for the night (dinner, bath, brush teeth, bed) and being reassured that no matter how awful he thinks he is or how terrible he feels, his mom will always love him, no matter what. (The drawings are clever and cute -- I like the "Fango" brand toothpaste for the little fox!)

It also has a great long-distance-family angle at the end. "Look up at the stars. They're far, far away, but their love reaches us at the end of each day. It's like that with love. We may be near. We may be far. But our love still surrounds us, wherever we are." It was years before I could read that without tearing up.

My kids love it, and so do I. I think I have literally read this book in my sleep, but I never tire of it.

A beautiful love story
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-26
I have an 18-year old daughter who left for college this year. I also teach first grade. As I was reading this story to my class yesterday,I thought of how my daughter is represented by the character named "Small" and I represent the character, "Large". It is a beautiful story of unconditional love. Not only appropriate for small children, but a reminder for families with children of all ages.

Animals
Owen (Coleccion Rascacielos)
Published in Paperback by Everest Publishing (2006-04-30)
Author:
List price: $8.99
New price: $5.02
Used price: $5.03

Average review score:

children's hit
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-27
for a child of any age that has a favorite blanket (blankey)
a plot a young child can follow and relate to.

Owen
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-08


I read Owen. I would recommend this book. The reason I would recommend it is because it was funny and it made me crack me up. In the book Owen, Owen and Fuzzy were playing captain plunger. They looked silly. This helped me convince me that it was a grate book.

Teacher's Review
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-17
This is a review/evaluation of the book as part of an in depth study on children's picture books. I am a third grade teacher and I use this book in my classroom because no kid is ever too old to read a great story like this. I truly think it is a classic!

Evaluation: In addition to the wonderful illustrations, this Caldecott Honor book is also a heart warming story that is very appropriate for young readers. The illustrations and the story are very appealing to children and allows readers to easily identify with the main character and the situation he is in. The illustrations add to the meaning of the text because they emphasis the personality of the characters. They highlight Owen's playfulness and the love that he has for his blanket. They also add to the worries of the adults in the story because their concern shows in the illustrations. The illustrations also extend the text because they are so clear that a student could understand the story without actually reading the text and rely only on the clues from the illustrations. The background settings are also nicely illustrated and accurately detailed because it is easy to compare and contrast when they are in places in their house that is shared by all of the family members and when they are in Owen's room and his play area in the background. Henkes also adds specific details to the setting that compliment the fact that the main characters are mice. This is reflected in the art work they have in their house and the statues they have outside. The illustrations are done with watercolor paints and black pen for the full-color art. This compliments the mood of the book because the illustrations are very colorful and vibrant. Henkes varies the size and number of illustrations on each page to compliment the plot and to reflect the sequence of events that take place. Each illustration is within black outlined boxes that make it easy to follow the progression of the story. The jacket and cover design expresses the theme and spirit of the book without giving away too much detail. The cover design gives some questions as to why a lady may be looking for the small boy and will spark children's curiosity making them want to read the book. The bright yellow and bold title stands out against a bright blue background. This book is very similar to Kevin Henkes other mouse books. All of his characters face some type of childhood problem that teaches them about growing up. His books are easily recognized by children because the title always contains the name of the main character. Readers also become familiar with the characters because they are in several of his books, even if it is only a picture of them with no reference in the story. The illustrations are all very similar in that they are fun and engaging and add to the story. Henkes commonly includes text in the illustrations that may be a character's thoughts or something they are actually saying. The added text is often more humorous than the story itself. Since Henkes is both the author and illustrator of his books, he has the liberty of making his text and illustrations become one and perfectly balance each other. This book is appropriate for the preschool level, but older children will also enjoy it, especially if they had a blanket or other comfort item that they adored in their childhood. Parents will also like the book if they are trying to teach their child the same lesson. This book is a very nice read aloud and should be part of classroom libraries. It should be on a booklist as a must read for students who are about to start kindergarten.

References:
Henkes, K. (1988). Chester's Way. New York: Greenwillow Books.
Henkes, K. (1996). Chrysanthemum. New York: Greenwillow Books.
Henkes, K. (1996). Lilly's Purple Plastic Purse. New York: Greenwillow Books.

Mom of a real Owen
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-09
I was given this book as a baby gift after my son Owen was born. I have been hooked on Kevin Henkes ever since. I still remember pausing in the story and my son Owen, when he was only 2 saying, "No, Fuzzy is perfect". This is a beautiful story which will be one of the books I hold onto forever. My Owen also has a special blanket that at 9 he still sleeps with- his coldie he calls it. Your kids and you will love this book even if they don't have a special blanket or lovie of some kind. All my children love this book and I have given it as a gift many times- also Lily's Purple Plastic Purse- very loved by all my kids. Enjoy! (And don't worry about what the nosey neighbors think!)

A sweet and thoughtful story
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-09
"Owen" is a sweet and thoughtful story on par with all of Kevin Henkes other children's books. Whether you're a teacher looking for a story that students can relate to, a parent searching for a meaninful read for your child, or if you are just in the mood for a story filled with sentiment, you can't go wrong with "Owen."

Animals
Dog
Published in Hardcover by Simon & Schuster/Paula Wiseman Books (2007-02-06)
Author: Matthew Van Fleet
List price: $14.99
New price: $9.07
Used price: $4.09

Average review score:

Defiantly a hit!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-04
I saw a young girl on an airplane several months ago completely engaged in this book and decided to give it a shot for a family trip to Alaska (1 1/2 hour dinners and a 4 1/2 flight). PERFECT solution. My 11 month old daughter LOVES this book and completely enjoys turning the pages, finding the pages with "moving parts" and/or texture.

She was captivated every evening at dinner and still picks this as one of her favorites. I highly recommend this book.

love it
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-27
My 11 month old LOVES dogs and cats. She can't read this by herself yet but she gets excited when we bring this book out and let her look at the doggies and pet them!! It blows her mind and she can't get enough. I can't wait until she's old enough to read it alone and not rip off the doggies ears etc. Well made book and very interesting for kids who love dogs.

Constant favorite
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-26
My 2-yr nephew and 18-month daughter love this book! It is a constant favorite before bedtime and she loves pointing and touching the different furry spots. There is even a "sticky" tongue that elicits laughs every time. The dog's pictures are great and the book is quite sturdy for toddler handling. This book is a must-have for any baby/toddler library!

A really fun book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-02
My 19 month old daughter loves it! I start the sentences and and my daughter tries to finish them. She loves lifting the flap at the end and seeing the cat. One caution...The tabs can be ripped off fairly easily. I actually had to get the book twice because my daughter liked to play with it so much.

Dogs
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-29
I bought this book for my granddaughters. They loved it. They liked the pictures and the interactive opportunities. It was a perfect book for 18 month olds. The little tails were torn off almost immediately but they still love the book.

Animals
Faces of Your Soul: Rituals in Art, Maskmaking, and Guided Imagery with Ancestors, Spirit Guides, and Totem Animals
Published in Paperback by North Atlantic Books (2006-07-19)
Authors: Kaleo Ching and Elise Dirlam Ching
List price: $21.95
New price: $13.10
Used price: $10.53

Average review score:

Faces of the Soul
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-22
I have found this book to be an extremely valuable tool and guide!
I gladly recommend it to artist, teachers, therapists and all those interested in expressive arts and inner journeying.

This is a powerful and practical, hands-on workbook, guiding us to expand and deepen our creative process.

The authors generously share their deep personal experiences, stories and wisdom, and ancient practices from many different traditions.

Through their personal stories, guided imagery, meditation, journaling and maskmaking, we are guided to give voice and expression to our inner connection.

A great gift is being offered in this book ... a gift to learn and pass on to others!

A intensely elaborate book that has helped me "face" reality
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-14
This wonderful book has helped me come in contact with my personal spirit guides and has helped me evaluate who I am at the depths of my true self. From the artfully crafted suggestions/visualizations (guided imagery) to the in-depth coverage on Eastern acupressure and somatic energy meridians; I love reading every page and savoring every articulation. The stories and examples in the book about how many people have explored their Totem Animals and Ancestors is spectacular and inspiring. Has only helped me on my journey as a hypnotherapist to teach and learn more about the Whole self through transpersonal activities and experiences. Thank you Kaleo and Elise for this treasure of golden and numinous wisdom.

Healing!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-13
This book is truly a gift! Perfect for teachers looking for a step by step guide for their class or perfect for groups looking for a tool to truly delve into theirselves. Therapists looking for alternative tools to help clients reach thier core, should also be pleased. This is healing art at its best! For a really phenomenal gift, check out one of Kaleo and Elise's maskmaking classes.

Faces of your Soul
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-28
This is a very inspiring book. It offers a wonderful journey into your inner world. Simple and easy to follow guided imageries lead you to explore and connect deeply to your soul. A great book for your spiritual healing and transformation!

Amazing guide for inner healiing and transformation
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-01
"Amazing! Thank you for the gift! Your book has given me a deeper and better understanding of the creative process and its power to heal the inner soul.I am starting a practice of mask making and body casting for healing. I am trying to bring together workshops for both...body casts for women who are breast cancer survivors. I have a degree in Expressive Art Therapy working with traum clients using art as a therapeutic tool and I need and want to start doing my art in a deeper more meaningful way. Your book gives so many wonderful and necessary spiritual guidelines and guided image exercises to weave into my practice. Thank you for sharing your wisdom. This is a spiritual path we are on."

Animals
Fowl Weather
Published in Hardcover by Algonquin Books (2007-03-01)
Author: Bob Tarte
List price: $23.95
New price: $4.98
Used price: $4.97

Average review score:

Give us more!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-17
Laugh out loud funny.I am currently reading the sequel"Fowl Weather"and it is just as good.Bob,put pen to paper and give us more.

A bit of car wreck
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-08
I will be one of the few dissenting opinions here. While the author certainly lets us into his life with honestly and humor, the fact that nearly of his pets treat him and his wife with what appears to be contempt makes this entire book seem like 3 hours of looking at a car wreck. And while a normal, well-adjusted life wouldnt make an interesting book, I lost sympathy for the author and his wife when some of their pets deaths were due to lack of proper maintenance of their housing. In addition they seem to have some sort of weird co-dependency with the most abusive animals such as the older parrots, enduring much pain for little return and yet insisting on always replacing them so the level of abuse stays the same, while treating the few animals that actually return love on a regular basis as somehow less important.

If you want to spend three or more hours looking at car wreck then buy this book.

Delightful, especially for animal lovers!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-18
I'm not normally a nonfiction reader, but Bob Tarte's Fowl Weather is a great book to break away from the fiction habit. This book will make you laugh, it will make you cry, it will restore your faith in the human race to know there are people out there (besides yourself) that truly care about, and nourish, God's creatures. Bob Tarte and his wife, Linda, go above and beyond in their nurturing of wild, and not so wild, animals. Bob relates his adventures with them in a funny, honest and totally involving manner. From Moobie, the white, picky cat, (who I loved) to Stanley Sue, the endearing parrot, to Bertie, the bunny, Bob writes about all of his pets with intelligence, humor and obvious affection. - Lisa, the Librarian

Tarte Funnier Than Ever
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-02
I thought Enslaved by Ducks was wonderful. I didn't see how a sequel could match it. But Tarte has come through with something just as funny if not more so. I could barely go to sleep at night worrying about how he was going to resolve his next dilemma. What else could go wrong? Apparently, anything and everything. Tarte's writing is exceptional. I truly think he could find a discarded potato chip bag on the side of the road and create a page-turning story out of it. NPR recently reviewed this book in their "Under the Radar" feature on their website.

Outstanding!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-23
Whether Bob was out standing in his field, in the barn, out by the river or in the house he gave me hysterical laughter every time I opened this book. A true tale of an animal loving guy, woven within a true story about real life. It truly inspires! Highly recommended (as well as Enslaved by Ducks)

Animals
My Dog Skip
Published in Paperback by Vintage (1996-01-30)
Author: Willie Morris
List price: $11.95
New price: $2.97
Used price: $1.02
Collectible price: $12.95

Average review score:

My Dog Skip
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-18
This is a wonderful and touching story. It is a good read, and I recommend it to anyone who has ever had a pet. I especially like that it has a jack russell in the story.

About a boy and his dog...
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-23
This book is the story of Willie Morris' childhood companion, a dog named Skip. Willie recounts his adolescent years and all the fond memories of his dog and friends as they grew up together in small town Mississippi. The story is heartwarming and the author paints a very clear picture of all the shenanigans, good times and bad that he and his dog had together over the years. I liked this book; but I think a male reader would appreciate the bond between a boy and his dog more than I can.

Best Book!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-17
This was a great book! It was so touching and heartfelt. I love dogs and this book is an example of someone who loves dogs like me so I can connect! Greatly recomended!

One of the best dog stories I have ever read
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-17
Willie Morris was a truly great author! This story of his childhood with his dog was really heartwarming. It is so simple and warm and humorous, you will just love it. Warning: you will cry your eyes out at the end, but it's worth the pain. One of the best animal stories ever, I hope many kids read this in school. If you loved the movie "A Christmas Story" you will love this book. The movie version of "My Dog Skip" is also quite good, though it is kind of upsetting that in order to create drama the wonderful father of the book is kind of nasty in the movie. Willie Morris was a great author who also wrote a cat book entitled "My Cat Spit McGee" and several books about his life that remind me a little of Russel Baker's memoirs. One is entitled "North Toward Home", another "Good Old Boy" and one is about life in New York City.

Beautifully Told
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2004-01-06
Willie Morris has recounted the life of not just a boyhood pet, but a dear and close friend.
The Story of Skip's life as told by his owner is full of mythic adventures of childhood. Where every new day was full of joy and wonder. Morris' storytelling brings the dog, his family and the lush southern landscape into full and brilliant view.
When you read My Dog Skip you can just feel how much this young man loved and revered his dog.
Any of us who have had a much loved pet know that the bond between animal and human can reach so much further than just "pet and owner". Willie Morris makes the statement that Skip wasn't just his dog, but his brother... that is a beautiful thing. Morris grew up an only child but did not feel alone by any stretch of the imagination. He was loved deeply by and deeply loved his dog Skip.
Another great point made in this book is how Willie Morris learned so much from his dog Skip. He clearly states that the most lasting lessons he has learned about love and loyalty came from knowing his dog.
This book captures so well the love a boy or any human being can have for a pet... I loved the story and highly recommend it!

Animals
Old Black
Published in Hardcover by Beverly Publishing Co. Inc. (1997-11-23)
Author: Doug Briggs
List price: $14.95
New price: $13.94
Used price: $0.41
Collectible price: $15.00

Average review score:

Wonderful story full of real people and a good horses
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-25
I'm a horsewoman, but I don't often find a good story with a horse as a main character. The authors don't often get their facts straight. This one did. Every detail that was explained was correct down to the smallest little thing.

Old Black, the book, was a bigger book than it seemed. I counted about 35 characters counting Sam the Rodesian ridgeback dog, and, of course, Old Black himself. Not one character escapes my mind's eye. I knew them every one. Even the reporter, Paul Hardesty, was memorable, and had only a cameo (but important) appearance. Oscar and Ruby, I fell for them hard. Salt of the earth. And how I cried when ... but read it yourself. I could see why the author took that route, it was a big step up the ladder to adulthood for Jim. It took me a long time to read the whole scene because I had a hard time seeing anything.

The author truly introduced every character. And that isn't so often the case.

There was some extravagant adventure in this story, but I never once had to suspend disbelief. Old Black the horse was not overplayed into a super horse, either. Nor was that wonderful little boy Jim. And wasn't Alexandra something? Uncle Harry was right, she's a little princess. And speaking of Uncle Harry and Aunt Hazel, everybody who knows someone who has a loved one with Alzheimer's should get a copy of this book. I know in my heart that Jim's therapy would be beneficial.

There are some real heartbreaking scenes and events in this book. And some funny ones too. I thought I'd die laughing over Mr. Mehlman's "theoretical last days." And the incident involving the snake in the bathroom. My husband came in to see what I was laughing about. I told him I had been bitten by the fabled laughing snake. (Of course, he didn't get it until HE read the book.)Wasn't Harry's reaction something a man with a good sense of humor would come out with? And I can understand Matt and Jim laughing themselves sick.

I finished Old Black, lay back on the pillow and relished it a while, then started right back on page 1.

Of Decency, Youth, and Quarter Horses, fermed
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-11
This is a book that violates all sorts of fiction writing rules; but in the end it tells its story well, and that, finally, is what matters. It is a story of love and respect between an aging but athletic horse, and a boy of great honesty and integrity. The bond that develops between them is powerful and enriches each other's lives. It is a touching and sentimental narrative, a story of good triumphant over evil, of decency, friendship, and of an idealized world of physical beauty in which racial conflict has been vanquished, in which people labor happily, and in which love is everywhere.

The author's compulsion to explain every motive and nuance, or to attempt to define the undefinable, fills the narrative with distractions and unecessary curlicues that don't further the action; fortunately, the story line is so strong that it withstands the interruptions. In summary, a book worth reading for all but the very jaded, and an ideal object as a gift for any youngster who owns a horse.

A wonderful story with great characters
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-15
I didn't have to wonder who the characters were as this story unfolded. They were introduced very well and they acted and talked true to their individual characters. Buck was a great guy. Little Jim had his hands full that day in the woods but didn't choke. I loved Ruby and Oscar. Uncle Harry would be a great guy to know.

I hope that guy at Richter's store gets some notice prior to his demise. I believe he really would use it to good advantage. As for Ralph, well, who ever heard of the inhabitants of a country having to live elsewhere? Alexandra? Who wouldn't like her?

This is a good story. There was much more to it than I expected. I didn't expect much humor, but almost split my sides laughing. There was sadmess enough, too.

The ending was perfect, more came together than I looked for, not a string left untied. I could read this again in a few months.

Wonderful story full of real people and a good horses
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-25
I'm a horsewoman, but I don't often find a good story with a horse as a main character. The authors don't often get their facts straight. This one did. Every detail that was explained was correct down to the smallest little thing.

Old Black, the book, was a bigger book than it seemed. I counted about 35 characters counting Sam the Rodesian ridgeback dog, and, of course, Old Black himself. Not one character escapes my mind's eye. I knew them every one. Even the reporter, Paul Hardesty, was memorable, and had only a cameo (but important) appearance. Oscar and Ruby, I fell for them hard. Salt of the earth. And how I cried when ... but read it yourself. I could see why the author took that route, it was a big step up the ladder to adulthood for Jim. It took me a long time to read the whole scene because I had a hard time seeing anything.

The author truly introduced every character. And that isn't so often the case.

There was some extravagant adventure in this story, but I never once had to suspend disbelief. Old Black the horse was not overplayed into a super horse, either. Nor was that wonderful little boy Jim. And wasn't Alexandra something? Uncle Harry was right, she's a little princess. And speaking of Uncle Harry and Aunt Hazel, everybody who knows someone who has a loved one with Alzheimer's should get a copy of this book. I know in my heart that Jim's therapy would be beneficial.

There are some real heartbreaking scenes and events in this book. And some funny ones too. I thought I'd die laughing over Mr. Mehlman's "theoretical last days." And the incident involving the snake in the bathroom. My husband came in to see what I was laughing about. I told him I had been bitten by the fabled laughing snake. (Of course, he didn't get it until HE read the book.)Wasn't Harry's reaction something a man with a good sense of humor would come out with? And I can understand Matt and Jim laughing themselves sick.

I finished Old Black, lay back on the pillow and relished it a while, then started right back on page 1.

An excellent book for youth and young adults
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-04
I was given this book by a friend and was surprised at the well-balanced combination of story, locale and apt descriptions of riding events.

Buck Jones: a rodeo cowboy who becomes seriously ill and must get rid of his beloved horse. I liked Buck a lot, and so did his friends in the story. He raised Old Black from a colt and only became a rodeo star after Old Black came on the scene as his roping horse. The day he got rid of his beloved pal was a heart-rending scene.

Small things impressed me. The arrival at the Bradley's farm with Jim's new horse -- he so wanted to show him off to the old black couple down the lane, but he had to wait. Things to do on the farm. Getting on the horse took some imagination for 10-year-old Jim Bradley, but he solved THAT! Then got an extension for his stirrup. Small things, but so important to the story.

Jim's first real horse show was an adventure for me. The hospitality suite he and his mother came upon, and got acquainted with the Robertsons and their daughters. Jim's performance in that western riding class was beautiful, as written.

I adored little Alexandra Meridith, her father. Her grandparents, Oscar and Ruby, were fine old people, and dearly loved by that little boy.

The series of chapters dealing with the rescue of the sheriff out in the woods was as stirring and exciting as could be. And it reeked of realism. That long episode was brought to a perfect conclusion, even if some concerns still were left dangling. But they were wrapped up later.

The funeral of a black lady was a fine piece of descriptive writing, touching.

The ending of the story was purely satisfying. The indignant lady in the stands was a good, good touch. How she finally came around to applaud Old Black after accusing him of hurting her daughters chances in the class. The unlikely but understandable award to Old Black. Then, something I can't tell because it would ruin the ending for readers, but it was just exactly what should have happened. Even if it caught be completely by surprise.

A great story.

Animals
Out Of The Darkness: The Story of Mary Ellen Wilson
Published in Paperback by Dolphin Moon Publishing (1999-03-01)
Authors: Eric A. Shelman and Stephen, M.D. Lazoritz
List price: $19.95
New price: $13.25
Used price: $7.74
Collectible price: $19.95

Average review score:

READ THIS BOOK!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-20
This book is a book that anyone who is considering a career in any type of child services needs to read. I myself am going into social services and this book made me realize what I will be seeing on a daily basis. Mary Ellen was such a brave little girl and I applaud her for surviving her early life!

Amazing
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-13
The book Out Of The Darkness is an awesome book. It shows the hard time that a little girl named Mary Ellen had to go threw. She has such a hard life, but in the end everything work out. I recommend this book for everybody. This is an outstanding book, everybody should read it.

If you've read this book, share your thoughts with others!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-03
I'm Eric Shelman, co-author of Out of the Darkness. I just wanted to ask that if you buy this book, come on back and write a review of it when you're done. I've never had anything but positive feedback about it, but others can use YOUR personal experience with it to better judge it prior to purchasing. I thank all of you who have read and commented on our book.

A must read for all Human Service Workers
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-05
The authors of this book have created a wonderful window of understanding how child abuse/neglect has evolved over the years. This book should be required reading for anyone interested in the human service field. Through the heart-felt story of Mary Ellen, we can see why there is such a strong need to protect children and continue to evolve for many more years. Thank you to Shelman & Lazoritz for telling such an important story.

A must read for social workers
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-27
Review of Out of the Darkness: The Story of Mary Ellen Wilson by Eric A. Shelman and Stephen Lazoritz, M.D. Dolphin Moon Publishing, 2003

I chose to review this book because it explains the job of a social worker in the early days of the profession. The book appealed to me as an author and advocate. Set in New York City immediately after the Civil War, this book offers a powerful story in a historical context. Using an original style that combines journalism with fiction, the writers completed a work of art that is based on a true story. The protagonist, Mary Ellen Wilson, was a real orphaned child who experienced devastating cruelty at the hands of the first woman to be tried and convicted of child abuse, Mary Connolly. The story climaxes when Etta Wheeler, a social worker; Henry Bergh, the founder of the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals; and Elbridge Gerry, ASPCA attorney, come together to rescue Mary Ellen. It's nearly inconceivable that animals were awarded victims' rights before children.

Thomas Wilson was an immigrant from Ireland who fled the potato famine to shuck oysters at a New York City hotel. In 1861 he married Frances Connor, an English immigrant who he'd met while she was a laundress at the hotel. While he was on the front lines during the Civil War, she gave birth to their daughter, named Mary Ellen. The year the child was born was the same year that Tom Wilson died in battle, 1864.

Frances found it difficult to work and care for her child, so she sought the services of a woman named Martha Score. Childcare for the working poor in the tenements of New York City provided meager nutrition and crowded conditions with no sanitation. However, Miss Score took good care of the baby while Frances worked long hours at the hotel. Travel through the tenements was treacherous at night, so Frances could not visit her child as often as she wished. After her husband died during battle, Fanny turned to alcohol for solace, leading to the loss of her job. Eventually, Fanny died in an "inebriate's asylum." When the war ended, working women returned to housekeeping as their husbands went to work. This left Miss Score with no income, thereby having to abandon the then two-year old Mary Ellen to Blackwell Island almshouse. Mary Ellen was illegally adopted to the evil Mrs. Connolly, where she suffered for seven years.

Etta Wheeler worked for St. Luke's Mission; she cared for the "outdoor poor" and frail elderly in the slums of the city. When neighbors spoke about the cries of a child called Mary Ellen, Miss Wheeler used all available resources to rescue Mary Ellen. However, she was often told by pastors, police, and lawyers to not interfere in the family's business. Undaunted by the advice, Etta persisted in her rescue efforts, eventually aided by Henry Bergh of the ASPCA. In 1874, with police assist, Mary Ellen was carried out of the abusive home, covered with a horse blanket provided by the ASPCA. The court proceedings set a precedent: "There had never been a recognized way to remove a child from an unfit home." The jury trial resulted in felony assault charges against Mrs. Connolly.

Etta Wheeler's sister, who lived on a farm in upstate New York, legally adopted Mary Ellen. Etta continued her social work in the tenements of New York City, where she was needed most. Mary Ellen eventually married, and her daughters spoke of their mother's burns and cuts that never fully healed. However, Mary Ellen lived until the age of ninety-two, surviving her husband by thirty-one years. Meanwhile, Mr. Bergh founded the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children. Mr. Gerry was responsible for forming the initial laws pertaining to the rights of children.

This story will cause the reader to wince at the cruelty and rejoice at the rescue. Perhaps the most poignant message in the book comes with the ending: "Perhaps we should see Mary Ellen not as the victim of abuse, but as the survivor, and as a persistent reminder that the efforts of a few people on behalf of one child can make a real difference." As a social worker, that is my hope.


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