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  1 My Near-Death Adventures (99% True!)
Author: De Camp, Alison
 
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Class: Fiction
Age: 8-12
Language: English
LC: PZ7.1
Grade: 3-7
ISBN-13: 9780385390446
LCCN: 2014017792
Imprint: Crown Books for Young Readers
Publisher: Crown
Pub Date: 02/24/2015
Availability: Out of Stock Indefinitely
List: $16.99
  Hardcover
Physical Description: 252 pages : illustrations ; 22 cm H 8.5", W 5.88", D 1", 0.875 lbs.
LC Series:
Brodart Sources: Brodart's Insight Catalog: Children
Brodart's TOP Juvenile Titles
Bibliographies:
Awards: Horn Book Guide Titles, Rated 1 - 4
Starred Reviews:
TIPS Subjects: Family Life
Historical Fiction
Action/Adventure
BISAC Subjects: JUVENILE FICTION / Historical / United States / 19th Century
JUVENILE FICTION / Action & Adventure / General
JUVENILE FICTION / Humorous Stories
LC Subjects: Adventure and adventurers, Fiction
Family life, Michigan, Fiction
Humorous stories
JUVENILE FICTION / Action & Adventure / General
JUVENILE FICTION / Historical / United States / 19th Century
JUVENILE FICTION / Humorous Stories
Logging, Fiction
Michigan, History, 19th century, Fiction
Missing persons, Fiction
Scrapbooks, Fiction
SEARS Subjects: Adventure fiction
Family life, Michigan, Fiction
Humorous fiction
Logging, Fiction
Michigan, History, 19th century, Fiction
Missing persons, Fiction
Scrapbooking, Fiction
Reading Programs: Accelerated Reader Level: 5 , Points: 7.0
Lexile Level: 800
 
Annotations
Brodart's TOP Juvenile Titles | 02/01/2015
Young Stanley Slater chronicles his mission to find his missing father with a special scrapbook as he scours 1895 Michigan's logging camps in search of the man who may not be dead, after all. Can 11-year-old Stanley thwart the menacing Granny, get past his insufferable cousin, and vanquish Mama's sinister suitor to find his father at last? 256pp., Photos
Journal Reviews
BookPage | 03/01/2015
8-12. In 1895, 11-year-old Stanley Slater and his mother must move to a logging camp for her job. Now he has to live with his grandmother--who is 99.9 percent evil--and put up with his cousin Geri. In between braving Geri's diagnoses (she wants to be a doctor), speculating on the speckled past of a logger named Stinky Pete and begging to accompany the lumberjacks on a dangerous river drive, Stanley composes imaginary letters from his missing father, detailing the crazy adventures that keep him from his son. Stanley's convinced that if he can just be manly enough, he can find his father and preserve his family. But being manly turns out to be harder than it looks. The hilarious antics that Stanley describes (one memorable incident involves Geri, an uncooked chicken and sewing supplies) make My Near-Death Adventures a laugh-out-loud book. But what truly stands out are the black-and-white images of vintage magazine ads, postcards and other documents that Stanley pastes into his scrapbook and annotates with amusing, perceptive comments. This is a rare combination of historical fiction, collage illustration and, in the end, depth of character. Jill Ratzan. 256p. BOOKPAGE, c2015.
Booklist | 04/15/2015
Grades 4-6. After a mysterious letter arrives in the mail, Stan, his mother, and his mean old grandmother are whisked off to a logging camp, where Stan's mother has a new job. When Stan learns that his "dearly departed father" isn't dead but long lost, Stan is sure he's going to find him at the logging camp. Armed with his scrapbook, Stan has an arsenal of evidence attesting to his bravery while acting as man of the house, which he's sure will impress his father. For starters, he's been keeping an eye on a lumberjack he's positive is a murderer, eluding his tricky cousin Geri, and surviving his evil granny. Stan is one for a tall tale, and his story is full of his hilarious misunderstandings and overactive imagination. Interspersed throughout are pictures and news clippings from Stan's scrapbook, embellished with wisecrack remarks, speech bubbles, and the occasional mustache, which will stick a smile on any reader's face. Stan's ridiculous tales are recommended for libraries where humorous historical adventures are popular. Thompson, Sarah Bean. 272p. AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION, c2015.
Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books | 03/01/2015
Ad. Gr. 4-6. For Stanley Arthur Slater, an eleven-year-old growing up in 1890s Michigan, there are too many women in his life and not enough male role models. Dad's been AWOL since Stan's birth, but that doesn't stop Stan from fantasizing about his father's return. In the meantime, though, Stan's pretty well smothered by the cranky attention of his grandmother, a critical, rule-setting force of nature whom he's not shy of calling "evil." Money's getting tight, so Mama and Granny haul him up to a relative's logging camp for a winter season, where Mama cooks while Stan freezes in scratchy woollen underwear, runs afoul of a string of practical jokes, suffers humiliation at the hands of a girl cousin, imagines dastardly backstories for some of the loggers, worries about his mother's attachment to the camp's accountant, and generally makes his life sound far worse than it is. Stan's account of his tribulations is accompanied by humorously captioned clippings from period catalogs and magazines and letters that he writes himself in the words of the father he wishes he had. It's an entertaining conceit, but it's not quite strong enough to support his ramblings and a recurring schtick wherein he frequently utters sotto voce remarks he thought were confined to his head; the story also isn't as tightly plotted as one might wish. Nonetheless, the humor and accessible format may make this a diverting quick pick for historical fiction fans. EB. 272p. THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF THE UNIV. OF ILLINOIS, c2015.
Horn Book Guide | 05/01/2016
3. Set at a late-nineteenth-century logging camp in northern Michigan, the humorous story details the exploits of eleven-year-old Stanley Slater, who's known for his overactive imagination, energy, and scrapbooking talents, and who's on a quest to find his long-lost dad. Larger-than-life characters dominate; standouts include Stanley's impossible cousin Geri, his strict grandmother, and lumberjack Stinky Pete (who may be a murderer). alc. 252pg. THE HORN BOOK, c2016.
Kirkus Reviews | 11/01/2014
Reality occasionally manages to force its way into a brash young motor mouth's 1895 account of chills and thrills at a remote Michigan logging camp.Scarcely has Stan noted the arrival of fearsomely strict granny Cora than he's being dragged away from his small town to the woods. There, in his mind anyway, loups-garous lurk in the shadows, rough lumberjacks conceal horrific past crimes, and Scary Geri, a slightly older cousin bent on becoming a doctor, waits to "welcome" him. Being both accident-prone and gifted with a hyperactive imagination, Stan falls victim to a string of frights as well as pranks perpetrated by a mysterious mischief-maker. These barely leave him time to pen imaginary letters from his deserter father, absorb the shocking news that his mother has asked for and been granted a divorce, and add wisecrack alterations to the 19th-century ads and other scrapbook clippings that appear here on nearly every spread. DeCamp also saddles Stan with an inability to tell whether he's keeping his frank opinions to himself or muttering them aloud, and since there are no textual cues, he and readers alike tend to find out which at the same time. It's a disorienting device, though Stan's hasty attempts to back and fill add further comedy to his headlong narrative. In the end, it's back to town and school, with suitors welcome or otherwise trailing after his mother. The author saves the identity of the prankster as a final delicious surprise. A knee-slapper of a debut featuring a narrator who is rather less than 99 percent reliable but 100 percent engaging. (Historical fiction. 10-12). 256pg. KIRKUS MEDIA LLC, c2014.
Publishers Weekly | 12/01/2014
Ages 8-12. Set in 1895 in Michigan's Upper Peninsula, DeCamp's exuberant first novel introduces 11-year-old Stan Slater who, readers quickly come to realize, is unknowingly vocalizing some of his rambling thoughts and wild imaginings, saying aloud things better kept to himself. Once readers acclimate to this narrative quirk, they'll easily become invested in Stan's story, which begins with him learning that the father he thought was dead is actually just a deadbeat. (Stan, however, remains "pretty sure he's a rich cowboy or exploring the wilds of North Pole, unable to contact us because of life-or-death matters.") Because of the family's precarious financial situation, Stan, his mother, and his acerbic Granny move to a remote logging camp, where Stan becomes convinced a lumberjack named Stinky Pete is a "cold-blooded killer," clashes with his cousin Geraldine, and is intensely displeased by his mother's suitors. Vintage images with irreverent captions (ostensibly taken from Stan's scrapbook) and imagined letters from Stan's absent father pepper the pages, adding another layer of comedy to Stan's freewheeling narration. Agent: Sarah Davies, Greenhouse Literary Agency. (Feb.). 256p. PUBLISHERS WEEKLY, c2014.
School Library Journal | 11/01/2014
Gr 4-6--Stan, the protagonist of DeCamp's lively and folksy debut novel, lives with his mother in Michigan in the late 1800s when a mysterious envelope arrives that changes their lives. Eleven-year-old Stan (who is literally counting the days until he turns twelve) has always assumed that his "long-lost father" is dead, but with the arrival of the envelope-and Stan's grandmother-he learns that his father is alive. Stan's "near-death" adventures begin when he travels to his uncle's logging camp where his mother and grandmother will cook for "real lumberjacks." With his cousin Geri (older than Stan by "twenty-three months and three days") as his guide, Stan navigates life with a group of colorful characters, using vivid language to describe the loggers and his campaign for his mother's permission to participate in the annual logrolling event. While Stan helps with chores, forms friendships with the loggers, and feels uneasy about the interest several men express in his mother, his rich imagination finds an outlet in the scrapbook he fills with magazine ads and clippings, copies of which are scattered throughout the novel. More poignant is the life Stan imagines his father having while waiting for his young son to find him. "I imagine he's out in the world doing something amazing, like mining gold or riding through the Wild West on horseback," Stan thinks. A secondary plot about Geri's interest in becoming a doctor enriches the story. Stan is a likable character with an exaggerated view of his abilities and a good heart. DeCamp's novel is a solid choice for fans of Rodman Philbrick's The Mostly True Adventures of Homer P. Figg (Scholastic, 2009). Shelley Sommer, Inly School, Scituate, MA. 272p. SCHOOL LIBRARY JOURNAL, c2014.
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