Kit's Wilderness

· Sold by Laurel Leaf
5.0
1 review
Ebook
256
Pages
Eligible

About this ebook

The Printz Award–winning classic gets a new look.

Written in haunting, lyrical prose, Kit’s Wilderness examines the bonds of family from one generation to the next, and explores how meaning and beauty can be revealed from the depths of darkness.

The Watson family moves to Stoneygate, an old coal-mining town, to care for Kit’s recently widowed grandfather. When Kit meets John Askew, another boy whose family has both worked and died in the mines, Askew invites Kit to join him in playing a game called Death. As Kit’s grandfather tells him stories of the mine’s past and the history of the Watson family, Askew takes Kit into the mines, where the boys look to find the childhood ghosts of their long-gone ancestors.

A Michael L. Printz Award Winner
An ALA Notable Book
A
Publishers Weekly Best Book

Ratings and reviews

5.0
1 review
A Google user
I read Kit's Wilderness because it seemed like a book that was shrouded in mystery and that was keeping a dark secret until the end which it was. Mr.Almond gives excellent foreshadowing in the beginning on page 7 by saying incantions like "do you abandon life" and "do you wish to die in the beginningof the book by giving you an idea of what the kids do in the mine and just how dark it truly is.When kit moves to Stoneygate,England an old coal mining town to help take care of his newly widowed grandfather who has devolped altheimers he meets a boy named John Askew whos grandpa is also a former miner, Askew will take on a major role in the story acting as a sort of antagonist. While in the abandoned mines KIt is intiated into a sort of cult with Askew as the head they sit in the abandoned mines and play a death which could be an attempt to commune with the spirits of the dead in the mines after all back in older times mines were very dangeous and many people died from suffocation or explosions. Kits willingness to throw himself into this cult is probably because hes the new kid Mr.Almond makes a good moral point in this idea that being new in a area or school means you can be suseptible to bad groups like Askews cult. The author does also an excelllent job of having a mystery aspect by making Kit piece together what Askew's group is all about. In conclusion Kit's Wilderness is a great read if your into a creepy mystery that has a historic aspect to it.
Did you find this helpful?
A Google user
on capter 6 cant get any father
Did you find this helpful?

About the author

“I grew up in a big extended Catholic family [in the north of England]. I listened to the stories and songs at family parties. I listened to the gossip that filled Dragone’s coffee shop.
I ran with my friends through the open spaces and the narrow lanes. We scared each other with ghost stories told in fragile tents on dark nights. We promised never-ending friendship and whispered of the amazing journeys we’d take together.

I sat with my grandfather in his allotment, held tiny Easter chicks in my hands while he smoked his pipe and the factory sirens wailed and larks yelled high above. I trembled at the images presented to us in church, at the awful threats and glorious promises made by black-clad priests with Irish voices. I scribbled stories and stitched them into little books. I disliked school and loved the library, a little square building in which I dreamed that books with my name on them would stand one day on the shelves.

Skellig, my first children’s novel, came out of the blue, as if it had been waiting a long time to be told. It seemed to write itself. It took six months, was rapidly taken by Hodder Children’s Books and has changed my life. By the time Skellig came out, I’d written my next children’s novel, Kit’s Wilderness. These books are suffused with the landscape and spirit of my own childhood. By looking back into the past, by re-imagining it and blending it with what I see around me now, I found a way to move forward and to become something that I am intensely happy to be: a writer for children.”

David Almond is the winner of the 2001 Michael L. Printz Award for Kit’s Wilderness, which has also been named best book of the year by School Library Journal, Booklist, and Publishers Weekly. He has been called "the foremost practitioner in children's literature of magical realism." (Booklist) His first book for young readers, Skellig, is a Printz Honor winner. David Almond lives with his family in Newcastle, England.

Rate this ebook

Tell us what you think.

Reading information

Smartphones and tablets
Install the Google Play Books app for Android and iPad/iPhone. It syncs automatically with your account and allows you to read online or offline wherever you are.
Laptops and computers
You can listen to audiobooks purchased on Google Play using your computer's web browser.
eReaders and other devices
To read on e-ink devices like Kobo eReaders, you'll need to download a file and transfer it to your device. Follow the detailed Help Center instructions to transfer the files to supported eReaders.