Product Details
Wing Nut

Wing Nut
By M. J. Auch

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Product Description

Twelve-year-old Grady Flood and his mom, Lila, have been on the road ever since Grady’s dad died seven years ago. When their old car breaks down, they find themselves stranded in rural Pennsylvania where Lila gets work as a cook and caretaker. There’s nothing out of the ordinary in that, unless you factor in her new boss. Old Charlie Fernwald, a skilled mechanic and bird enthusiast, is definitely out of the ordinary. In fact, if Grady’s not mistaken, Charlie is a certifiable “wing nut.” For the time being, Grady figures, he can help Charlie with his birds and maybe even learn how to fix a car engine. But before he can do either, something goes terribly wrong.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #108151 in Books
  • Published on: 2008-10-28
  • Released on: 2008-10-28
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 256 pages

Features


Editorial Reviews

From School Library Journal
Grade 5-8–Since his father's death seven years ago, Grady, now 12, has followed his footloose, attractive mom, Lila, from one shaky living situation to another, staying put only until her optimism turns to anger over some affront. Feeling her work at the Sunward Path commune is underappreciated, she and Grady are heading for New York when their junker car breaks down in rural Pennsylvania. As usual, Mom lands on her feet, accepting a position cooking for cranky widower Charlie Fernwald, a retired farmer who is, in Grady's opinion, nutty about purple martins–not martians as Grady at first believes. The elderly man is willing to take them on temporarily to fool his son into believing that he's being properly looked after. Lila is willing to play this charade, while slipping healthful veggies into Charlie's diet in hopes of winning him over to obtain a more permanent position. Grady appreciates his host's willingness to teach him about cars, but steadfastly refuses to go to school, secretly releases invasive house sparrows from Charlie's trap, and worries about keeping his mom from becoming romantically involved with the local mechanic. While there is nothing terribly original in a lonely boy and a cranky elderly man overcoming differences to find common ground, Grady, Charlie, and Lila have sharp edges that reveal their individual personalities. Their emotions are heartfelt, and readers will be encouraged by the hopeful, upbeat ending. Nicely integrated plugs for both Katherine Paterson's The Great Gilly Hopkins (HarperCollins, 1978) and the Web site of the National Purple Martin Association are woven into this simple, satisfying story.–Joel Shoemaker, Southeast Junior High School, Iowa City, IA
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist
Gr. 4-7. Since his father died, 12-year-old Grady and his mom, Lila, have lived in a lot of dead-end places, none of them worth being called "home." But maybe Charlie Fernwald's Pennsylvania farm, where Lila has been hired to cook for the 85-year-old farmer, mechanic, and purple martin enthusiast, will be different. Maybe. But Grady makes a terrible mistake. Auch's story of the slowly developing friendship between a lonely boy and an elderly man whose passion for birds has sustained him through the death of his wife is engaging, though a tad predictable. What will attract readers like martins to a gourd nest is the author's careful integration of bird lore and the unusual challenges of creating and maintaining a purple martin colony. A good book for reluctant boy readers. Michael Cart
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Review

“The story of a boy who finally finds a place to call home should resonate deeply.”—Kirkus Reviews
 
“Grady, Charlie, and Lila have sharp edges that reveal their individual personalities. Their emotions are heartfelt, and readers will be encouraged by the hopeful, upbeat ending . . . [A] satisfying story.”—School Library Journal
 
“A spirited, fresh treatment of the familiar plot of a homeless but self-reliant family finding permanence.”—The Bulletin of the Center for Childrens Books
 
“[A] well-told tale.”—Voice of Youth Advocates
 
“What will attract readers like martins to a gourd nest is the author's careful integration of bird lore and the unusual challenges of creating and maintaining a purple martin colony. A good book for reluctant boy readers.”—Booklist


Customer Reviews

Characters shine in this story5
Twelve-year-old Grady Flood shines in this story of a boy, his mother, and the strange old man who reluctantly takes them in after their car breaks down in a rural Pennsylvania town. After his father was crushed under a car he was repairing, Grady and his mother, Lila, drift from place to place trying to survive. Lila, a hard but uneducated worker, falls back on her skills as a housekeeper and cook to find work in communes. Grady is alternately annoyed and worried about his pretty mother. He feels an urgent need to protect her from unwanted male attention, yet wishes in turn that she would worry more about his needs for a permanent home.

At first, old Charlie Fernwald, a retired farmer who knows how to repair engines and has a passion for saving purple martins, refuses to take the pair in. But since his son insists he needs a caretaker, he allows Lila and Grady to stay just long enough to fool his son into thinking someone is caring for him. Lila works hard to prove her worth as a cook while Grady follows the old man around. He thinks Charlie's fascination with purple martins makes him a "wing nut" and soon he is secretly saving the house sparrows that Charlie wants to kill because he insists they attack his purple martins.

Charlie and Grady form an uneasy but endearing friendship. Gruff and stubborn, Charlie can't help being disarmed by Grady's willingness to work hard. He soon sees Grady's vulnerabilities and worries and takes an interest in Grady's spotty schooling, even offering to home-school Grady.

M. J. Auch gradually reveals more and more facets of Grady's character. He comes across as a multi-faceted and realistic boy. His thoughts reveal a boy who is struggling with a variety of developmental issues. He willingly takes on responsibility but soon makes mistakes that reveal his need for guidance from Charlie. And Grady does make plenty of mistakes. He's stubborn, opinionated, and determined to control some of Lila's choices in an attempt to control his own life.

Charlie, too, is well-developed and endearing. He reveals his own prejudices and hard-headedness, yet soon shows a softer side as he tries to father young Grady. Grady and Lila have a difficult time accepting help from Charlie, and he has a hard time giving it at times, but soon the three of them begin to form a family unit despite their determination not to get involved with each other.

Their attachment is threatened by Grady's mistakes and Charlie's anger, but each character has grown just enough to overcome the failures and hang on to what they've found together.

There's a lot to learn in this quiet story. Just as they grow to like each other, these characters grow on the reader, pulling you into their lives and leaving you satisfied that despite their many challenges, they've all found a hopeful new beginning by story's end.

Wing Nut4
I thought that this book took place a long time ago with the look of the cover and reading the first few chapters, but it takes place now. It's about a 12 year old boy Grady and how he and his mom are trying to just get by. Grady reads in this book about another character to make his life feel better and if you think your life is tough you may feel better about your situation after reading about Grady although there is a more happy than sad ending.

Wing Nut4
Wing Nut is a winner of the Florida Sunshine Reader Awards and reading from that list usually assures me of a story with a lot of kid appeal. From the beginning of this one, I was hooked. A kid, his mom, a hippie commune, an old man, his purple martins- such disparate elements weave into a novel that is just plain fun to read. The developing relationship of 12-year-old Grady and what seems to be a grumpy old man is an important element that's never sentimental, often humorous. I loved the writing, the story, the characters, the title- everything about this one.