Gnat Stokes and the Foggy Bottom Swamp Queen
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Average customer review:Product Description
Save me! When twelve-year-old Gnat Stokes comes upon this message from Goodlow Pryce, missing these past seven years, Gnat knows he’s still alive. She’s determined to save him and bring him home to his Appalachian mountain cove even if it means facing the evil Swamp Queen, Zelda, who lurks in nearby Foggy Bottom. An enchanted locket, a talking cat and a mysterious voice all point to the fact that more than just Goodlow’s life is at stake. All that Gnat has come to know of life and love - even her own identity - is about to be tested.
From the acclaimed author of The First Horse I See and I Am Regina comes this original, warm and intriguing adventure based on the famous Scottish ballad Tam Lin.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #1666986 in Books
- Published on: 2005-04-21
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Hardcover
- 160 pages
Features
- ISBN13: 9780399242878
- Condition: NEW
- Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
Editorial Reviews
From School Library Journal
Starred Review. Grade 5-8–Motherless Gnat Stokes, 12, is a cheerful, hardy, adventurous sort who is determined to rescue Goodlow Pryce, who was stolen 7 years earlier by Zelda, the malevolent, magical Swamp Queen. When Gnat catches a mysterious swamp cat and discovers that Goodlow sent it to Penelope, his true love, she removes the charmed locket and the rescue message it carries. When she puts in on, she falls in love with Goodlow. Battling scary swamp monsters and the revelation that Zelda is her mother, Gnat comes to realize that she must give Goodlow up in order to save him. Told in Gnat's mountain-tinged, irreverent voice, this imaginative tale is strewn with laughter from humor involving the consumption of beans to send-ups of self-righteous community figures who don't favor education. Imagine Phyllis Reynolds Naylor's Sang Spell (S & S, 1998) with much wilder plot events and characters and you will begin to see the certain appeal of this bounding, delightful, Tam Lin-based story.–Cindy Darling Codell, formerly at Clark Middle School, Winchester, KY
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From Booklist
Gr. 5-8. Keehn spins a magical Appalachian tall tale filled with kid-pleasing elements: a nightmarish swamp swarming with hordes of gruesome, bewitched creatures; sweethearts tragically separated by Zelda, the evil Swamp Queen; Eatmore Beans, a talking cat bearing an enchanted locket; and a most unlikely heroine--feisty, 12-year-old Gnat Stokes. In spite of her unfortunate parentage (no one knows who her mother is and her long-gone father is a "no-good Rebel," though the war ended years ago) and the fact that local folks think she "was born to raise trouble," Gnat longs to be a hero. When she intercepts a mysterious locket, it immediately triggers a series of bizarre, dangerous events, inextricably linking Gnat's fate with the lovers Penelope and Goodlow. Keehn's tale is by turns, creepy, laugh-aloud funny, touching, and utterly satisfying. Her voice is sassy and straight out of the Tennessee hills, making this a book that begs to be read aloud as well as a superb choice for readers' theater. Chris Sherman
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Review
...appeal of this bounding, delightful, Tam Lin-based story. -- School Library Journal, starred review
Customer Reviews
Gnat Stokes Is A Keeper!
Gnat Stokes And The Foggy Bottom Swamp Queen is a keeper-- touching, funny, and full of faith in the healing power of love. Sally Keehn has given us a memorable fantasy adventure told in vivid language rich with the tone of the Smoky Mountains and delivered in a fresh, authentic voice. I loved every word and the spaces in between.
The characters, even minor ones, are colorful and well-drawn. Granny Hart, collector of stories, catcher of babies, with second sight, who delivers sermons with every bath, and explains the different kinds of love with the metaphor of a many-sided love-crystal. Grandpa, with his steadfast presence, his wisdom about the importance of properly naming people and animals, and his three Idas. The newly arrived teacher, Miss Hope, with her gold tooth, her love of books, and three magic Latin words, "Amor Vincit Omnia," to be spoken as talisman when facing danger--"Love Conquers All." Eatmore Beans, a talking cat with a Scottish accent who delivers to Gnat a gold locket containing an urgent message, and then befriends wordless Baby Earl. And Gnat herself--a bona fide original, self-described as "twelve and running amok," motherless, a plucky mountain gal hungry for books and learning, an open-hearted scallywag determined to redeem herself and be a hero.
Further enhancing the enjoyment, the settings of Mary's Cove and Foggy Bottom Swamp are vividly imagined and artfully described. And the names of people and places delight: Goodlow Price, Jib Darnell, Hallelujah Pond, Devil's Notch, and my favorite, "The Francis Spittle Home For Wayward Girls." Also, the naming rituals described add an interesting layer of meaning to a story already rich with thoughtful symbols and messages.
I've enjoyed all of Sally Keehn's books, but this one has stolen my heart....
Careful on this one
I ordered this book for a reading group for my fifth graders. I had a parent of one the students "concerned" about the "spooky" content that Sally Keehn put in this children's book, and I had to switch that child to a different group to accommodate. It is an enjoyable book to read if you stress that it is a fiction book.
A perfect story for families to read aloud together
The year is 1868, but in the back woods of Tennessee, the Civil War is still brewing. Twelve-year-old Gnat Stokes, whose mother abandoned her at birth and whose "no-good pappy" is a "thieving Rebel," lives with her grandfather in Mary's Cove. Gnat has a reputation as a troublemaker, but secretly she just wants to learn about the world --- she loves reading, and desperately wants to go to school.
Mary's Cove is surrounded by misty, creepy swamplands, presided over by the evil Foggy Bottom Swamp Queen, Zelda, and her army of bogie monsters known as Swamp Knights. Seven years earlier, Zelda, who often takes the form of a panther, kidnapped the handsome youth Goodlow Pryce. Since then, Goodlow's sweetheart, Penelope Drinkwater, has pined over her lost love.
Gnat wants to like Penelope, but when a talking cat (soon named Eatmore Beans) delivers an enchanted locket with a cryptic message from Goodlow, Gnat intercepts it and finds herself head over heels in love with Goodlow. Soon Gnat and her three friends are on a quest to rescue Goodlow so that Gnat can become a town hero and find true love.
GNAT STOKES AND THE FOGGY BOTTOM SWAMP QUEEN is written from Gnat's perspective, in a folksy, down-home tone that lends ambience to this Appalachian tale. Inspired by the old Scottish ballad "Tam Lin," GNAT STOKES draws on many folk traditions, but also includes more modern touches such as Gnat's infatuation with LITTLE WOMEN and a running joke about the adverse effects of eating too many beans.
With its Southern tone, dramatic and humorous scenes, and unforgettable heroine, GNAT STOKES AND THE FOGGY BOTTOM SWAMP QUEEN feels like an old-fashioned yarn people used to tell around the camp fire, making it an ideal story for families to read aloud together.
--- Reviewed by Norah Piehl




