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Bezig met laden... Finders Keepersdoor Melanie McFarlane
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Meld je aan bij LibraryThing om erachter te komen of je dit boek goed zult vinden. Op dit moment geen Discussie gesprekken over dit boek. Deze bespreking is geschreven voor LibraryThing Vroege Recensenten. Cute children's book. Aimed at middle readers. Macy goes looking for treasure. She hopes to strike it rich so they won't have to move. She has a nice relationship with her Mother and brother. Deze bespreking is geschreven voor LibraryThing Vroege Recensenten. This is a short and wonderful novel about a mermaid trapped in Buffalo Pound Lake, Saskatchewan. For some reason this makes it Canadiana although it could have been set anywhere away from the ocean. Grandma, dad and nine year old all enjoyed reading this. The characters are relatable and the setting makes you want to visit Saskatchewan, or at least this part of that province. As an aside, the book is friendly to dyslexic readers with a special font and paper. However, I know some people can't read serif heavy fonts and this font is very much a serif font so that might be a problem for those readers.geen besprekingen | voeg een bespreking toe
Onderdeel van de uitgeversreeks(en)
Twelve-year-old Macy is an amateur treasure hunter. She finds all sorts of lost things along the shores of Buffalo Pound Lake. When her mom announces she's leaving her quiet park ranger job at the lake to be a police officer in the city. Macy decides she needs to find a treasure big enough to put Buffalo Pound on the map so her family can stay put. But instead of treasure, Macy finds a mermaid! She learns that the frightened creature was kidnapped from the West Coast and brought to the Prairies by a monster known only as "The Beast." Macy is determined to help her get home. Geen bibliotheekbeschrijvingen gevonden. |
Deelnemer aan LibraryThing Vroege RecensentenMelanie McFarlane's boek Finders Keepers was beschikbaar via LibraryThing Early Reviewers. Actuele discussiesGeen
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I was very interested in reading the book, because I have visited Buffalo Pound more than once, love it very much from afar, and hoped for some feeling of the place. I didn't really get that feeling, probably partly because the shortness of the book (115 pages) and the necessarily simplified presentation of the story did not allow for much description of the scenery (and the scenery at Buffalo Pound is truly magical and amazing, with the rounded hills looking like the back of sleeping buffalo that might wake, emerge from the earth, and suddenly speak), but also because I was just puzzled about the setting, like where the general store was that the kids were continually bicycling to. The only store I'm aware of within a reasonable distance of the park is the concession inside the park, and the details of this store didn't fit. It helps with this sort of thing if the author puts a small explanation in the back of the book to tell readers what they changed in the physical landscape. A map of the area would have been immensely helpful too. The kids travel all over the park, to places I recognize and places I didn't, and I couldn't keep up with it. If I didn't know the park at all, I wouldn't have been any less disoriented. Perhaps Orca will provide these in the final edition.
The heroine of the story is obsessed with treasure hunting, so I was quite surprised when she and her mother discuss her mom's plans to move to Moose Jaw and Macy is resistant, that rather than refer to the famous Moose Jaw tunnels (built, according to legend, by bootleggers -- the treasure potential must be almost as great as the historical interest), Mom just says that new places have new treasures. Meh. A great chance to get kids interested in Saskatchewan's history was missed there.
All in all, it's a book likely to engage young readers' attention. There are some good family scenes, and boy/girl cooperation between Macy and her friend Sam, and positive messages about the elderly neighbour whom the children initially misunderstand, who turns out to be a very interesting person indeed. Plus mermaid drama and treasure. Recommended. ( )