Just Books for Kids   In association with Amazon.com
Categories
Dr Seuss
New Readers
Animals
Adventure
Vacation
Science
Sports
Heros
Family
Pre Teen
Computer
Reference
Penguin Shops

Penguin 64

Penguin CPU

Penguin Kitchens

Penguin Audio

Penguin Videos

Penguin Cameras

Related Sites

Ultra Mega Mart

Geek Book Store

News and Shopping

Great Books to Buy

Books, DVDs, and More

Bookmark this page:
ADD TO DEL.ICIO.US ADD TO DIGG ADD TO FURL ADD TO STUMBLEUPON ADD TO YAHOO MYWEB ADD TO GOOGLE

Great Northern?: A Scottish Adventure of Swallows & Amazons

Great Northern?: A Scottish Adventure of Swallows & Amazons
Author: Arthur Ransome
Publisher: David R Godine
Category: Book

List Price: $14.95
Buy Used: $8.25
You Save: $6.70 (45%)



New (18) Used (11) from $8.25

Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 2 reviews
Sales Rank: 195378

Media: Paperback
Reading Level: Young Adult
Pages: 352
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.9
Dimensions (in): 8 x 5.6 x 1

ISBN: 1567922597
EAN: 9781567922592
ASIN: 1567922597

Publication Date: November 1, 2003
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: VG Trade PB with very light shelfwear. Contents bright, tight and clean.

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Finally! Here is the twelfth, and final, book in Arthur Ransome's acclaimed Swallows and Amazons series. People familiar with his earlier work will recognize the pattern: children set out on an adventure (this one off the coast of Scotland) with a minimum of parental advice and interference. Here, the story centers on a desperate race to thwart the efforts of pernicious egg collectors threatening the survival of a pair of rare birds not previously known to nest in British waters (actually, the bird is the handsome North American "Great Northern Diver," more commonly called a loon).


Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars A bittersweet finale to the series   April 16, 2008
Michael Cornett (Takoma Park, MD USA)
2 out of 2 found this review helpful

The Swallows, the Amazons, and the D's are all sailing in the Scottish isles when Dick Callum makes a fairly significant discovery...a Great Northern Diver (known in the US as the common loon) is actually nesting in the British Isles, where they're not known to nest. Dick turns to another bird person who operates another boat, only to find that this fellow is an egg-collector who seeks to kill the birds and raid the nest. Thus follows an exciting adventure across the Highlands, with plots, counterplots, and a spanner thrown in the works by locals who fear the crew are deer-poachers.

This novel is a fun adventure and also a look at a shift in views toward naturalism. We have the old-school naturalist in the form of the egg-collector, and the new school in the form of Dick, who seeks only to observe and document and leave the birds alone. A strong environmental message permeates this book, set in 1934 and written in 1947. Egg-collecting (oology) was banned in England not long after this was published, and is also now illegal in the US. (There is debate among series fans if this is a "fantasy" entry like PETER DUCK or MISSEE LEE, or a "real" entry like the rest; I opt for the latter.)

And while it's a good send-off for the characters, it was not meant as such. Ransome had another adventure in the works, COOTS IN THE NORTH, that was unfinished and the fragments have been published in an anthology, now sadly out of print. Ransome was convinced into letting the series lapse, which is a tragedy, but readers can let themselves imagine where the series could have led from here.



5 out of 5 stars Superb   April 26, 2004
21 out of 22 found this review helpful

This book from the 1930s or 40s starts with a group of kids sailing in the Hebrides with Uncle Jim -- the uncle of two of them -- at the end of their cruise. They stop to spend a day taking care of the borrowed boat -- cleaning the bottom and putting on a new coat of bottom paint -- and while the older ones are doing this, the younger ones explore. One of them goes birdwatching, and sees something unusual.

Sounds pretty dull, right? Wrong. Like all the Ransome (non-fantasy) books, the bad-guy in this book -- an egg-collector -- is completely plausible AND horrible. The multiple story lines are all intriguing. The respect for decent behavior (cleaning the bottom of someone else's boat? Making sure to bury a bit of waxed paper from your sandwich...in 1935??? Respecting property ... not disturbing wildlife ... Passing behind a sailboat when you're in a faster motorboat...) isn't drilled in with a ham-handed holier-than-thou-ness; it's just part of what you get when you read the book. You also get a terrific adventure, a fingernail-biting crisis and denoument (remember when denoument was part of a good story?), humor, character, and a feeling of the Hebrides that you just don't forget.

If your kids don't like this book, keep the book and throw the kids in the trash.


Ultra Mega Mart: bigger than those other marts