Product Details
Gemini Summer

Gemini Summer
By Iain Lawrence

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Product Description

In the quiet of Hog's Hollow, each member of the River family pursues a dream. Old Man River sets out to build a fallout shelter in case the war in Vietnam "brings the end of everything;" his wife Flo, who collects Gone with the Wind dolls, attempts to pen her own Southern saga; Beau, their older son, suffers from "space fever" and aspires to be an astronaut. As for Danny, the younger River boy, well, he just dreams of having a dog. Then in the spring of 1965 tragedy befalls the Rivers--a tragedy that makes the Old Man wish he'd never started building the shelter, stops Flo from finishing her bestseller, and leaves Beau grounded rather than airborne. But the tragedy does finally bring a dog into Danny's life. And not just any old dog. Danny comes to believe that the mixed-breed stray embodies the spirit of someone he dearly loves. He won't allow anyone to separate him from the dog, not even after it bites the neighborhood bully and the police are sent to take it away. Together Danny and his dog run off, heading toward Cape Caneveral, where the Gemini missions blast off from, and where dreams come true.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #1055568 in Books
  • Published on: 2006-10-10
  • Released on: 2006-10-10
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 272 pages

Editorial Reviews

From School Library Journal
Grade 5-8–In the mid-1960s, Danny River and his family live on the periphery of Toronto, in out-of-the-way Hog's Hollow. The neighbors find the family somewhat odd: the father, Old Man River, cleans septic tanks for a living, while Mrs. River imagines herself a belle of the old South, and their older son, Beau, dreams of becoming an astronaut. As the Vietnam War looms larger, Old Man River remembers his World War II experiences and begins to dig a shelter in an effort to protect his family from the threat of missiles. The construction has disastrous consequences when the boys are playing around the site and Beau falls in. Lawrence's talent for creating captivating and rounded characters is fully realized from this point in the story as the Rivers struggle to come to terms with Beau's death. When a stray dog appears shortly after the tragedy, Danny refuses to become attached to it out of a misplaced guilt over his brother's death, but, over time, understands that loving Rocket does not lessen his love for his brother. The pace picks up nicely in the second half of the book when Danny and Rocket attempt to get to Cape Canaveral to realize Beau's dream. Adventure abounds, and the interesting detail that Lawrence weaves in about the Gemini Space Program and astronaut Gus Grissom will appeal to reluctant readers as well as more seasoned ones. This robust novel offers an affirming and hopeful look at a difficult subject.–Kim Dare, Fairfax County Public Schools, VA
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist
Eight-year-old Danny spends the summer of 1964 avoiding the bully down the street, playing with his big brother, Beau, and begging his parents for a dog. In the meantime, Beau obsesses about becoming an astronaut, his mother dreams of becoming a rich author, and his father, a World War II vet who anticipates that the Vietnam War will "bring about the end of everything, digs a hole in the lawn to make a shelter for his family. Come spring, Beau falls to his death while playing around the hole, and the family shatters and then slowly rebuilds. When a stray dog adopts him, Danny is convinced that Beau has returned as a dog, and he sets off for Cape Canaveral to realize Beau's dream of seeing the Gemini missions. This sensitively told story is full of small, descriptive details that breathe life into the people and the setting, and the family's grief at Beau's death is immediate and profound. Danny's perspective is spot-on for his age, making him a realistic focal point. The later half of the novel, during which Danny meets Gus Grissom and flies in a T-38, is less plausible, but serves as wish fulfillment for readers who would also love to rocket through the sky. Krista Hutley
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Review
“Lively prose, quirky characters and strong dialogue animate this moving story.”—Kirkus Reviews, Starred

“Lawrence creates a poignant family drama that will pull the heartstrings of anyone who has looked up to an older sibling or has fallen in love with a dog.”—Publishers Weekly, Starred


From the Trade Paperback edition.


Customer Reviews

A satisfying, very different kind of story of a family's struggles.5
Iain Lawrence's GEMINI SUMMER tells of a family filled with dreams: a father builds a fallout shelter in event of the 'end of everything', his wife is writing her own version of 'Gone with the Wind', an older son aspires to be an astronaut, and Danny wants a dog. In 1965 tragedy will change all their agendas and will introduce new directions into set paths - some for better, some for worse. Young adult leisure readers will find this a satisfying, very different kind of story of a family's struggles.