![]() ![]() The Story of Buildings: From the Pyramids to the S. ![]() Here's the way I'm going to sum up: it's the kind of book that needs to be read twice (to catch all the double meanings) but not one that I want to read again. However, that kind of depth definitely gets the reader thinking. I can't quite figure out the purpose behind the book. But, it has so many layers and parts to the rather unbelievable (as in: farfetched) story (stor ies, that is) that I find it hard to enjoy. James Patterson The Washington Post, January 1. The characters and their emotions are amazing-Vanderpool is an amazing writer. Review - Just the sort of book that saves lives by igniting a passion for reading. Currently obsessed with finding the Great Appalachian Bear, the Jack goes with Early on a journey that will test their relationship, beliefs, and survival. He also counts jelly beans to calm down, only listens to Billy Holiday when it's raining, and can calculate the digits in pi through images and color. Early is an orphan living in the school, attending classes as he pleases. ![]() ![]() WWII has just ended and with the unexpected death of his mother, Jack Baker has just been shipped from Kansas to a boarding school in Maine where he encounters a strange boy named Early Auden. Themes: autism, journey, death, belief, family ![]()
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