About this item
Highlights
- The name has haunted my sleep and made my awake hours uneasy for as long as I can remember.
- Black-Eyed Susan Award (Grades 6-9) 1992 4th Winner
- 8-12 Years
- 7.56" x 5.06" Paperback
- 128 Pages
- Juvenile Fiction, Action & Adventure
Description
About the Book
Alone in the frontier wilderness in the winter of 1839 while his father is recovering from an injury, eleven-year-old Nathan runs afoul of the renegade killer known as Weasel and makes a surprising discovery about the concept of revenge.Book Synopsis
The name has haunted my sleep and made my awake hours uneasy for as long as I can remember. Other children whisper that he is part man and part animal -- wild and blood-thirsty. But I know Weasel is real: a man, an Indian fighter the government sent to drive off the Indians -- to "remove them." Weasel has his own ideas about removal...
Now that the Shawnees are dead or have left, Weasel has turned on the settlers. Like his namesake, the weasel, he hunts by night and sleeps by day, and he kills not because he is hungry, but for the sport of it...I know what I have to do. Weasel is out there. He could come here and hurt us. Maybe Pa can wait for the day when we'll have the law to take care of men like Weasel. But I can't...
Review Quotes
"This novel is poignant reading for middle school students and reluctant readers." -Kliatt"Nathan Fowler, eleven, narrates a short, exciting story of his adventures in 1839 Ohio...Written in spare, vivid language, often poetic, the novel is plausible historical fiction that deals with the inhumane treatment of Native Americans from a different angle."-School Library Journal."Unforgettable!"--"School Library Journal (Starred Review)