This is so good...but sad. It's about a boy who was on a hunt with his father. His father was bit by a snake and he had to kill a deer to use its entrails and heart to heal it. The doe had a fawn and they thought it fair that they take care of the fawn till it could go. I'm not going to spoil the story, but something sad happens!
The Yearling
By Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings, N. C. Wyeth
Interest Level | Reading Level | Reading A-Z | ATOS | Word Count |
---|---|---|---|---|
Grades 9 - 12 | Grades 3 - 9 | X | 5 | 128886 |
Book Reviews (3)
When I read this, I was really hoping for more. The Yearling is simply not my type of book, and the grammar and spelling was terrible. I was asked to read this for a reading program, but I just couldn’t get into it. I can understand that the author wrote it in 1938, and not in the present day, but this book made me wonder if the characters actually spoke like the ones in The Yearling back then. I only read 50 pages of this, but I already didn’t like it much.
I think I understand what you (@thistle912) mean about the grammar; it's not the way my friends and I talk and it's difficult for me to read. "Yes" people really did talk that way & recently. As a "kid" of the 1970s, I remember "Andy Griffith" spoke similarly to that on TV. Where I live in central CA, there's been a trend in education to recognize that "standard" English is important, but it's not the only legitimate dialect. I tried to read the Yearling a few times and just recently decided to "read" the audio book to get more used to the accent and to think about whether or not the story is appropriate for my young nephew. My nephew's family and I don't eat meat, but the idea of "kill or go hungry" is an important part of our history.
This book is sweet and plays with your emotions. For all animal lovers!