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Tree Castle Island

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
The best-selling author of My Side of the Mountain takes listeners on a different sort of wilderness adventure in this intriguing tale of nature, survival, and mystery. Something about the Okefenokee Swamp of southern Georgia has always called to 14-year-old Jack Hawkins. But when a nervous mama gator takes a bite out of his handmade canoe, Jack finds himself stranded on a remote island, forced to find his own food and shelter-and to unravel a mystery that reaches far into his past and could change everything he thinks he knows about himself.
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  • Reviews

    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from May 12, 2003
      A 13-year-old boy goes on a human quest for discovery on a homemade canoe in a search in the Okefenokee Swamp for the fabled Paradise Island. The "quasi-mythic" story "combines survival tale, nature study and mystery," wrote PW. Ages 8-12.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      May 6, 2002
      Combining survival tale, nature study, mystery and legend, Newbery Medalist George (Julie of the Wolves) serves up an ultimately unsatisfying stew. While his parents vacation in Europe, 13-year-old Jack, the narrator, stays on his Uncle Hamp's farm on the St. Mary's River in Georgia. Hamp goes off to help a neighbor for "at least a week or two... maybe more," and Jack decides the time is ripe to paddle his homemade canoe to the source of St. Mary's, the great Okefenokee Swamp, and search for the fabled Paradise Island. That "Paradise," Jack muses, "is a fantasy for most people Uncle Hamp says it's part of a human quest for discovery." When an alligator tears a hole in Jack's canoe, the boy finds himself stranded on a small island, where he becomes acquainted with the wildlife and vegetation, builds himself shelter and forages for food. While George demonstrates her expertise as a naturalist, she relaxes the pacing to such an extent that almost no tension remains in the narrative. Jack, underdeveloped as a character, approaches his adventure with matter-of-fact calm. A puzzle emerges when Jack finds an Airedale that looks just like his own dog, answers to the same name and
      turns out to belong to another boy, an explorer like Jack, who is revealed to be Jack's identical twin, separated at birth. The factual descriptions of the swamp habitat and the fantastic elements of the plot cancel each other out, collapsing the quasi-mythic underpinnings of this "quest for discovery." Final artwork, by George, not seen by PW. Ages 8-12.

Formats

  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

Languages

  • English

Levels

  • Lexile® Measure:580
  • Text Difficulty:2-3

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