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Castaways: Stories of Survival
by
Gerald Hausman
Fiction
English
Greenwillow (2003), Library Binding, 160 pages
Grades 4 to 6, Ages 10 to 12
ISBN:
0060085991
Summary:
Amazon.com Book Description (ISBN 0060085991, Library Binding) How can a castaway survive on a tiny island that's nothing but sand -- no fresh water, no vegetation, no animals, just sand? How can another manage to face down a crocodile, a shark, and the bizarre beasts that roam his stange deserted island and prey on his imagination? And what can a third do when he finds himself adrift one hundred miles from land, surrounded by ocean and sky -- and ghosts?
Here are six unforgettable tales of people who are set upon by raging weather, swooping seas, hunger, thirst, wild animals, overwhelming loneliness, and, harshest of all, thier own inner demons. Based on historical accounts and legends and seasoned with Gerald Hausmann's own experiences as a Sea Scout and long-distance swimmer, these exciting stories are fired with desperation, chilled with haunting breezes . . . and warmed by the sweet peace of survival. (retrieved from Amazon Wed, 12 Dec 2007 17:26:37 -0500) Includes story, "Crossing the Everglades"
From School Library Journal Grade 5-9-These six stories were inspired by tales of real people who survived shipwrecks. In 1540, Peter Serrano, a Spanish traveler, was marooned on a barren island near Peru and survived by eating sea turtles and using their shells for shade and shelter. In the 1940s, 15-year-old Henri Roi's swimming prowess made him a legend. In the water with shipmates after their boat capsizes, Henri says, "We gonna make it.- I not gonna let you drown. I got the Great Maker in my heart and King Neptune in my bones; I can swim forever. This sea, this angry sea, is nothing to me." The teen's story is told in colorful language and with the dramatic flair of a storyteller. Ghosts and mythical creatures appear throughout the stories, especially in "The Beasts of Philip Ashton," in which the castaway succumbs to madness trying to ward off the night beasts and day beasts. A story about Logan Welsh and a ghostly encounter with the Pinta is loosely based on the real adventures of Joshua Slocum. While some stories are stronger than others, this collection would make a good read-aloud for middle grades. Vicki Reutter, Cazenovia High School, NY Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
From Booklist Gr. 5-8. A moderately engaging group of six tales, each based, however tenuously, on historical or first-person accounts, with clear endnotes about what was taken from sources and what the author invented. The stories have a curiously flat tone, but drinking turtle's blood ("The Turtle Island of Peter Serrano"), being saved by ghosts ("The Modern Mariner and the Pilot of the Pinta"), and living as the sole survivor of a shipwreck ("The Widow Carey's Chickens") do have their appeal, especially for readers steeped in Survivor lore and pirate films. Where these stories really come to pulsing life is in descriptions of endurance swimming at sea: Hausman is himself a long-distance swimmer, and the vividness of those passages is riveting. GraceAnne DeCandido Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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