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Author - Wilson Rawls ... [Goo?] [Posters]This Paperback Book item from Yearling was reviewed on 5-Oct-2008. Search ISBN:0440415802 offer from Abebooks or used books from Alibris. Summer of the Monkeys Reference Book. Classifications : Fiction Apes & Monkeys Animals Children's Books 4-for-3 Books Store Custom Stores Specialty Stores Books General Issues Children's Books 4-for-3 Books Store Custom Stores Specialty Stores Books Action . Click the following link to view the cover of Summer of the Monkeys. Related topics: Fiction. Apes & Monkeys. Animals. Children´s Books. 4-for-3 Books Store. Custom Stores. Specialty Stores. Books. General. Issues. requestid: 2bbdec61-1528-4281-b0b7-3badb71946cdrequestprocessingtime: 0.1305240000000000 salesrank: 18172 numberofitems: 1 packagedimensions: 8075040520 1) Paperback Book Summer of the Monkeys by Yearling. Summer of the Monkeys may be historical fiction, but the dialogue is pretty modern and bland. More accurate dialogue would have added charm and humor. Also, the boy compares fireflies to "a million flashlights." The flashlight had not been invented. A quibble, yes, but come on. It takes you out of the story. I thought the challenge of the monkeys was funny, but everything else predictable. The denouement was beyond sappy, beyond belief, and way too saccharine. And the closing paragraph seemed tacked on and rushed. The book, I think, would be best enjoyed by 4th or 5th graders. The writing and plotting is just too simplistic for middle schoolers.¤ 2) Paperback Book Summer of the Monkeys by Yearling. This is the first time I have read "Wilson Rawls" and, although essentially a children´s book, I enjoyed his writing very much. It captures the heart and touches some part of our childhood. The plot was quite interesting as well, with boy things versus girl things, having a sick child who finds a world of expression and selflessness and parents with only a hope of getting her treated due to lack of money, then the twist of fate in things turning out all right.¤ 3) Paperback Book Summer of the Monkeys by Yearling. Out of all the people involved in this work, you´d think it would have dawned on at least ONE of them that these are CHIMPANZEES, not monkeys. Monkeys are as different from chimps as dogs are from cats. Did no one attached to this project take a high school science class? And this work is geared toward children, no less! Amazing! No wonder we can´t convince the other half of the country to accept Evolution...they don´t even know the difference between a chimp and a monkey!¤ 4) Paperback Book Summer of the Monkeys by Yearling. My 8 yr old daughter (a very good reader) loves this book!! She first read Where the Red Fern Grows and loved that. She was inspired to read this one and loves it even more! She may be a good reader, but she is picky. She looks forward to reading this one. She says that Wilson Rawls makes her feel like she is really there.¤ 5) Paperback Book Summer of the Monkeys by Yearling. Summer of the Monkeys
6) Paperback Book Summer of the Monkeys by Yearling. The last thing a fourteen-year-old boy expects to find along an old Ozark river bottom is a tree full of monkeys. Jay Berry Lee´s grandpa had an explanation, of course--as he did for most things. The monkeys had escaped from a traveling circus, and there was a handsome reward in store for anyone who could catch them. Grandpa said there wasn´t any animal that couldn´t be caught somehow, and Jay Berry started out believing him . . . 7) Paperback Book Summer of the Monkeys by Yearling. Jay Berry Lee is happy until the summer he is 14 years old and discovers monkeys living in the creek bottoms near his parents´ homestead. Set in the late 1800s, Summer of the Monkeys traces the boy´s adventures as he attempts to capture 29 monkeys that have (it turns out) escaped from the circus. With somewhat dubious help from his grandfather, and over the objections of his mother, Jay goes about discovering that monkeys are much smarter and harder to catch than he thought possible. Woven into this story is a second theme about his physically disabled sister and the family´s attempts to find money for an operation. As funny and touching as Wilson Rawls´s Where the Red Fern Grows, this book will appeal to the young reader who has always wished for the freedom to run wild through the woods with nothing more pressing to do than find another rabbit hole--or escaped monkey. (Ages 12 and older) --Richard Farr¤ Page Updated: Robert N. Goolsby, 2-Nov-2008, 04404158029780440415800, 720-150-760-020-840-160-8
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