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Sunshine /

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: Somerville, Massachusetts : Candlewick Press, [2021]Copyright date: 2021Edition: First editionDescription: 193 pages ; 21 cmContent type:
  • text
  • still image
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 1536214116
  • 9781536214116
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • [Fic] 23
Summary: For most of Ben's life, he has been a kid without a mom. He has his dad, who knows Ben doesn't like oatmeal and always hugs Ben before bed. And he has Sunshine, his loyal little dog, who is never far from his side. But his mom, who left when he was young, has just been a story, faint in his memory. Now he's about to spend a whole week with her on her remote island in the middle of the northern Minnesota wilderness. Though he's nervous about bears and outhouses and what his mom will think of Sunshine, Ben has a plan. When a fire threatens his mom's island, Ben finally realizes everything he's been trying to forget and learns how to forgive his mom - and himself.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Home library Collection Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Standard Loan Coeur d'Alene Library Juvenile Fiction Coeur d'Alene Library Book J BAUER (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 50610022760180
Standard Loan (Child Access) Harrison Library Juvenile Fiction Harrison Library Book BAUER (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 50610023087021
Standard Loan (Child Access) Hayden Library Juvenile Fiction Hayden Library Book BAUER (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 50610023087088
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

Set in the northern Minnesota wilderness, a timeless novel about a boy and his imaginary dog explores the legacy of guilt and blame--and what really constitutes a family.

Newbery Honoree Marion Dane Bauer evokes the "summer that changed everything" in the life of a boy growing up without a mother. Since as far back as Ben can remember, it's been him, his devoted dad, and Sunshine--Ben's little dog, who rarely leaves Ben's side. It was Mom who did the leaving, and Ben's about to spend a whole week with his suddenly present mother in the wilds of northern Minnesota. On the remote island she calls home, Ben will learn to canoe, weather the elements, and weigh a burning question: when will she come back to where she belongs? A must-read for dog lovers, children of divorce, and the imaginative and outdoorsy, Sunshine is a poignant, ultimately hopeful story about self-discovery, facing big realities, and finally, forgiving the things--and people--you can't forget.

A Junior Library Guild Selection.

For most of Ben's life, he has been a kid without a mom. He has his dad, who knows Ben doesn't like oatmeal and always hugs Ben before bed. And he has Sunshine, his loyal little dog, who is never far from his side. But his mom, who left when he was young, has just been a story, faint in his memory. Now he's about to spend a whole week with her on her remote island in the middle of the northern Minnesota wilderness. Though he's nervous about bears and outhouses and what his mom will think of Sunshine, Ben has a plan. When a fire threatens his mom's island, Ben finally realizes everything he's been trying to forget and learns how to forgive his mom - and himself.

Reviews provided by Syndetics

Publishers Weekly Review

Bauer's (Winter Dance) slim, absorbing novel plunges into the emotional life of Ben, presumed white, who has not communicated with his mother since she abruptly left when Ben was three. Since then, he has lived with his caring father, who likes things "just so," and his loyal--though wholly imaginary--dog Sunshine while longing to be like other kids who have a mother, and struggling with many fears: of heights, of the dark, of getting lost. Suddenly inspired to bring his parents back together, Ben asks to visit his mother on the remote island where she lives in northern Minnesota. Their first days are filled with adventure--she teaches him to paddle a canoe, shows him a moose, a blue heron, a mama bear and her cub at play--and with Ben's inexplicable feelings of anger and guilt. In unfamiliar physical and emotional territory, he behaves with uncharacteristic foolhardiness, leading to a dangerous climax and a revelation behind the reason his mother left. With a deeply sympathetic protagonist, deftly drawn adult characters, and a skillfully crafted narrative structure, this is a profoundly affecting read. Ages 8--12. (May)

School Library Journal Review

Gr 4--6--Ben, a young white boy, and his dog Sunshine are spending a week with Ben's mom in northern Minnesota. Exploring the lakes and islands of the region, Ben sees moose, white-tailed deer, and a blue heron. His mother left when Ben was three, and his plan is to bring her back home to St. Paul. Living on a remote island, in a cabin with no electricity, Ben's mom doesn't seem afraid of anything. But Ben is a "what-if'' kid; scared of heights, the dark, and getting lost. With Sunshine at his side, he can be brave. After Ben's mom discovers he has an imaginary dog, she explains, to Ben's delight, that Sunshine is his guardian spirit. However, when encountering bears, Ben calls out a warning to Sunshine, and endangers their lives. Now his mom suggests it's time to give up his pretend dog. Bauer keeps the reader wondering why Ben's mom left the family, creating a sensitive portrait of a woman victim to an abusive mother. That Ben is hiding his anger beneath a multitude of fears feels authentic, and his deep need for the adoring Sunshine will resonate for dog lovers. Descriptive passages of the islands and the trio's adventures in the Minnesota wilderness are sure to appeal to outdoorsy readers. But the central theme of the book, Ben's sense of loss and abandonment, informs every part of the narrative as he vacillates between trying to connect with his mother and the anger that's expressed in his shrugging off her touch. VERDICT A moving story about a boy and his dog and the solace a pet, real or imagined, can bring.--Sarah Webb, City and Country Sch. Lib., NY

Kirkus Book Review

When Ben was just 3, his mother abandoned him and his father. Now the boy is to spend a week with her on an extremely isolated island in a lake on the Minnesota-Canada border. Fortunately, he has his golden-red dog, Sunshine, to accompany him. His pragmatic dad says he's far too old for an imaginary pet, but Sunshine is what keeps this "what-if kid," as his father calls him, safe. She pushes his fears down as Ben and his mother paddle across one lake and then another to reach her cabin. Although Sunshine attacks a bear and her cub that his mom takes them to see, they come through the danger unscathed. It's only after he takes the canoe and nearly fails to paddle back against a driving wind that he recognizes Sunshine's shortcomings. Without the dog's support, he finally confronts his mother about what he believes he did to drive her away when he was a toddler. Then he learns the crushing truth: that, after the damage of her own abusive upbringing, she feared she would hurt him. A terrifying fire on the island forces him to courageously help his mother and eventually come to grips with both her flaws and his. Richly character driven, immersive, evocative, and painfully sad, this effort can't fail to move young readers. Ben and his family seem to be White. An outstanding exploration of childhood trauma from a masterful author. (Fiction. 8-11) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Author notes provided by Syndetics

Marion Dane Bauer was born in Oglesby, Illinois. She attended community college first, in her home town, and then went to the University of Missouri when she was a junior to study journalism. She quickly realized that journalism was not for her and changed her focus to the humanities and a degree in English literature. She switched one last time to focus on teaching english, which she did when she graduated college.

After her children were born, Bauer decided to try her hand at writing. She started out with a children's picture book, but discovered that youg adult novels were more to her taste. After making a career out of writing, Bauer became the first Faculty Chair at Vermont College for the only Master of Fine Arts in Writing program devoted exclusively to writing for children and young adults.

Bauer is the author of more than forty books for young people. She has won many awards, including a Jane Addams Peace Association Award for her novel Rain of Fire and an American Library Association Newbery Honor Award for On My Honor and the Kerlan Award from the University of Minnesota for the body of her work. Her picture book My Mother is Mine was a New York Times bestseller.

(Bowker Author Biography)

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