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How To Steal A Dog
How To Steal A Dog
Price: $11.30
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Annotation: A girl, desperate to improve her family's financial situation, persuades her younger brother to help her in an elaborate scheme to get money by stealing a dog.
Catalog Number: #16367
Binding Type: Perma-Bound
Publisher: Square Fish
Copyright: 2009, c2007.
Pages: 170 p.
Available: Yes
ISBN: 0-312-56112-1
ISBN 13: 978-0-312-56112-3
Dewey: F
LCCN: 2005040166
Dimensions: 20 cm.
Language: english
Reviewing Agencies: School Library Journal Starred Review, ALA Booklist (3/1/07), Curriculum Connections, Horn Book, National Council For Social Studies Notable Children's Trade, Publishers Weekly, Wilson's Children's Catalog, Wilson's Junior High Catalog
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Word Count: 34,585
Reading Level: 4.0
Interest Level: 4-7
Accelerated Reader: reading level: 4.0 / points: 5.0 / quiz: 115455 / grade: MG
Reading Counts!: reading level:3.8 / points:9.0
Lexile: 700
School Library Journal Starred Review
Gr 3-7- Georgina and her family have been living in their car since her father left and they were evicted from their apartment. Mama is working two jobs to earn rent money and trying hard to hold things together. Desperate to help out, Georgina decides to steal a dog for the reward money, laying out the details of her plan in a diary. However, the dog's owner can't afford to offer a reward, and Georgina ends up feeling sorry for the lonely woman. The girl also makes friends with another adult named Mookie, a kindhearted wanderer who is camped out at the abandoned house where she is keeping the dog. He shares his wisdom and offers help, whether she wants it or not. Georgina's narrative is honest and deeply touching, as she recounts how she and her brother try to survive their circumstances. Washing off in a gas station restroom and turning in grease-stained homework become fairly normal occurrences. Readers will identify with the agony and the embarrassment caused by being different, as well as Georgina's struggles with her conscience. The book's endearing humor smoothes out the more poignant moments, and the unfolding events will keep youngsters totally engaged. The gem in the story is Mookie, who manages to sparkle even when sadness threatens to devour the moment. Though set inside a heavy topic, this novel's gentle storytelling carries a theme of love and emphasizes what is really right in the world.-Robyn Gioia, Bolles School, Ponte Vedra, FL Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information.
Horn Book
After Georgina's father leaves, her family struggles with poverty and homelessness. Desperate, Georgina convinces herself that stealing a dog to collect reward money is the answer. Tension builds as Georgina's plan unravels and she wrestles with her conscience. The main characters are realistically drawn, and O'Connor spins a touching story about an ordinary girl in unfortunate circumstances.
ALA Booklist
One day Georgina has a home, a best friend, and plenty to eat. The next, she’s living in a car with her mother and brother. Carrying on as usual isn’t possible: washing up in a restaurant bathroom, doing homework by flashlight, losing her friend. Mom works two jobs, but it’s not enough, so impatient Georgina decides to steal a dog, hoping to collect a reward. She picks her furry victim and makes careful plans—but she doesn’t count on her conscience. In stripped-down, unsentimental prose, Georgina tells her own story, her words making clear her vulnerability and heartbreak as well as her determination and pride. It’s puzzling why Mom doesn’t seek outside help for her desperate family, and the appearance of wise Mookie, a sort of transient deus ex machina, verges on excess. Yet in the end, this is truly Georgina’s story, and to O’Connor’s great credit, it’s Georgina herself who figures out what’s right and does it. The myriad effects of homelessness and the realistic picture of a moral quandary will surely generate discussion.
School Library Journal
Gr 3-7- Georgina and her family have been living in their car since her father left and they were evicted from their apartment. Mama is working two jobs to earn rent money and trying hard to hold things together. Desperate to help out, Georgina decides to steal a dog for the reward money, laying out the details of her plan in a diary. However, the dog's owner can't afford to offer a reward, and Georgina ends up feeling sorry for the lonely woman. The girl also makes friends with another adult named Mookie, a kindhearted wanderer who is camped out at the abandoned house where she is keeping the dog. He shares his wisdom and offers help, whether she wants it or not. Georgina's narrative is honest and deeply touching, as she recounts how she and her brother try to survive their circumstances. Washing off in a gas station restroom and turning in grease-stained homework become fairly normal occurrences. Readers will identify with the agony and the embarrassment caused by being different, as well as Georgina's struggles with her conscience. The book's endearing humor smoothes out the more poignant moments, and the unfolding events will keep youngsters totally engaged. The gem in the story is Mookie, who manages to sparkle even when sadness threatens to devour the moment. Though set inside a heavy topic, this novel's gentle storytelling carries a theme of love and emphasizes what is really right in the world.-Robyn Gioia, Bolles School, Ponte Vedra, FL Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information.
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