About this item
Highlights
- Inside one of America's most troubled periods of economic crisis, The Road From Nowhere, from master storyteller and Newbery medalist Avi, is both a tightly plotted adventure and a big-hearted tale of boyhood that explores what it means to put a name to the feelings we're taught to push down far into the earth.
- 8-12 Years
- 8.25" x 5.5" Hardcover
- 304 Pages
- Juvenile Fiction, Historical
Description
Book Synopsis
Inside one of America's most troubled periods of economic crisis, The Road From Nowhere, from master storyteller and Newbery medalist Avi, is both a tightly plotted adventure and a big-hearted tale of boyhood that explores what it means to put a name to the feelings we're taught to push down far into the earth.
There's one road in Gatchett's Gluch--population forty-five--a silver mining town in the high Colorado desert. That means there's only one way in and one way out.
Fourteen-year-old Ollie feels trapped and restless, desperate to find his own lode of silver, so he can gain riches and get his family out of the town. As the man of the house, he feels that's his job, just as his younger brother Gus's job is to ask question after question. Though Ollie is unwilling to admit it, he doesn't have all the answers. He can't even read, unlike Alys, the only girl and only friend he has outside of Gus.
Meanwhile, a man who calls himself a geologist has arrived in town. Not only can he read books, he can read rocks, the first person that Ollie has ever seen who looks at rocks with fascination, not desperation. Most important, he knows how to stake a silver claim. So when Ollie, Gus, and Alys stumble upon a cave rich with silver and form a friendship with that geologist, the future suddenly looks good. The problem: Elijah Gatchett runs the Gulch and claims all its silver. Men have been kicked out--or shot at--for seeking it on their own. But for the kids, the only thing worse than their families staying under Gatchett's thumb is getting run out of town with not so much as a penny in their pockets.
The kids are desperate to find an answer. It may lay in that dark cave. How Ollie, Gus, and Alys navigate all this--with a surprising ending--is an old-west adventure that has never been told before.
Review Quotes
Distinctions and Praise for The True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle
A Newbery Honor BookBoston Globe-Horn Book Award
An ALA Notable Children's Book
An ALA Best Book for Young Adults
A Booklist Editors' Choice
A Horn Book Fanfare Book
An NCTE Notable Children's Book in the Language Arts
A School Library Journal Best Book of the Year
* "A thrilling tale, tautly plotted, vividly narrated." --Kirkus Reviews, starred review
* "Riveting. Nonstop action. A story hard to forget." --Booklist, starred review
Distinctions and Praise For Nothing But the Truth
A Newbery Honor Book
A Boston Globe-Horn Book Award Honor Book
An ALA Notable Book
An ALA Best Book for Young Adults
"The story of Philip Malloy, his family, friends, teachers and school, shouts to be shared." --The New York Times
"It is clear that Avi is attuned to the modern high school scene. With frankness and remarkable insight, he conveys the flaws of the system while creating a story that is both entertaining and profound." -- Publishers Weekly
About the Author
Avi's work spans nearly every genre and has received countless major prizes, including the Newbery Medal for Crispin: The Cross of Lead and Newbery Honors for Nothing But the Truth and The True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle. Avi lives in Colorado. You can learn more about him online at avi-writer.com.