White bird

by Clyde Robert Bulla

Paper Book, 1966

Status

Available

Call number

823.91

Collection

Publication

New York, Crowell [1966]

Description

A lonely boy is found and reared by a hermit in the wilderness of the Tennessee mountains in the 1880s.

User reviews

LibraryThing member flamingrosedrakon
This was an interesting concept for a book about a grumpy young man who is involved in the work of his farm but takes the time to save a child who is swept down the river in a cradle. Every step of the way he tries to stop and block the boy-child from doing anything whether moving, going to town or
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getting a dog that would hurt him.

Eventually John Thomas finds an injured albino crow and takes it home to nurture it. Again the older man tries to get the boy to release the bird back into the woods where it belongs the boy defies him thus leading to a few troubles down the road.

The story is simple to read and understand so definitely a good choice for a Stepping Stones book. Any child that is starting into chapter books will find the story a good one to follow with the lack of details or length although the message may be a bit loss.

And I loved the presentation of the pictures since although they were black-and-white they were beautifully detailed while adding life to the book.
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LibraryThing member Cheryl_in_CC_NV
Children can be surprisingly insightful and enthusiastic about discussing the big questions of life, if given a chance. ?áJust because this is a short book, with illustrations and with a relatively easy reading level, don't dismiss it as pap. ?áThe idea of the bachelor farmer, who professes
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misogyny but keeps the orphan boy he finds after a storm, is complex... and then, figuring out why he acts the way he does towards that boy and that boy's adopted orphan bird, is even trickier -- because there is no exact right answer, and your students or children might disagree with you and with each other. ?áWhich is a good thing: children need to learn to think for themselves. ?áOn a slightly more accessible level, you could simply ask the children if they would go to the lengths that John Thomas did to retrieve the bird, and if they would go back home at the end.

Bulla is an under-appreciated author, I think. ?áI'll keep reading his works as I get a chance.
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Language

Physical description

79 p.; 23 cm

Pages

79

ISBN

0690884990 / 9780690884999
Page: 0.4162 seconds