From a two-time Newbery Honor author comes a contemporary and irresistible novel about a young girl from Brazil who travels to New York to live with her father and older brother, and a parallel story about a young filly whose destiny lies with the girl.
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In this tender if occasionally overdramatic novel, two-time Newbery Honor author Giff (Lily' Crossing; Pictures of Hollis Woods) relates the analogous stories of a 12-year-old girl and a filly. Lidie moves from Brazil to New York to join her brother and horse trainer father, who had left their homeland years earlier. She knows little English, misses the horse she loved to ride and is angry that her well-meaning father and brother still treat her like a little girl (They didnt know me, not at all). Lidie immediately bonds with Wild Girl, her father' new horse, which she observes had been born in the warmth of the South... and brought here to this cold world, just as I had. There' little subtlety in the parallels Giff draws between the two: Lidie' late mother had called her my wild girl and, sensing the filly is lonesome, she thinks, I knew how that was. Yet readers will find Lidie a strong protagonist, her difficulty in adjusting to her new life credible and her eventual feeling of belonging she finally feels at home when riding Wild Girl for the first time gratifying. Ages 8 12. (Aug.) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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Gr 4 6 Twelve-year-old Lidie must leave her beloved home in Brazil for a new life in New York. She reunites with Pai and her older brother, who left shortly after Mamãe died five years earlier. Lidie's father and Rafael train racehorses for a wealthy benefactor. When she meets the filly Pai has dubbed Wild Girl, Lidie remembers her mother calling her by that name. The horse's story parallels hers, as they are both plunked down into an unfamiliar, sometimes harsh environment. But when at last Lidie rides Wild Girl, it is as if their spunky, spirited souls gloriously merge. This brief tale of the sense of powerlessness that accompanies childhood is magnified by the perspective of an immigrant girl. It also addresses the pain of separation from loved ones, and animal cruelty. These issues are dealt with in an evenhanded, never too sorrowful or desperate way. Readers will find hope and resiliency in this coming-of-age story. Tracy Weiskind, Chicago Public Library Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From: Reed Elsevier Inc.
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Twelve-year-old Lydie has lived with her aunt and uncle for five years, ever since her mother died and her father and older brother moved from Brazil to the U.S. Lydie is eager to join them, but when she arrives, she feels ill at ease with her new language, her new school, and even her family. Dissatisfied with the old, tame horse her father (a trainer) gives her to ride, she sets her sights on Wild Girl, a touchy, spirited filly. Mistakes, misunderstandings, and moments of awkwardness seem insurmountable, but slowly Lydie begins to feel at home. Chapters of Lydie's sensitive first-person narrative alternate with vivid third-person passages describing Wild Girl's life. Readers who choose the book because of the horse on the jacket will find a satisfying girl-meets-horse story. Those looking for a convincing, sometimes moving immigrant story will find it here as well. But the heart of this accessible chapter book is its fine, perceptive portrayal of Lydie and her family. Phelan, Carolyn.
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