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The Crazy Man [Hardcover]

Pamela Porter
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
List Price: CDN$ 18.95
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Book Description

Aug 4 2005

It is 1965, and twelve-year-old Emaline lives on a wheat farm in southern Saskatchewan. Her family has fallen apart. When her beloved dog, Prince, chased a hare into the path of the tractor, she chased after him, and her dad accidentally ran over her leg with the discer, leaving her with a long convalescence and a permanent disability. But perhaps the worst thing from Emaline's point of view is that in his grief and guilt, her father shot Prince and then left Emaline and her mother on their own.

Despite the neighbors' disapproval, Emaline's mother hires Angus, a patient from the local mental hospital, to work their fields. Angus is a red-haired giant whom the local kids tease and call the gorilla. Though the small town's prejudice creates a cloud of suspicion around Angus that nearly results in tragedy, in the end he becomes a force for healing as Emaline comes to terms with her injury and the loss of her father.

In the tradition of novels such as Kevin Major's Ann and Seamus and Karen Hesse's Out of the Dust, novelist and poet Pamela Porter uses free verse to tell this moving, gritty story that is accessible to a wide range of ages and reading abilities.


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From School Library Journal

Grade 5 Up–This beautifully written novel in verse tells the story of a 12-year-old girl struggling to recover after a freak farm accident leaves her partially crippled and fatherless. Her dad, after shooting the dog that he blames for the tractor mishap, walks out on her and her mother, leaving them to tend the farm by themselves. After a long and painful hospital stay, Emaline returns home to a distraught mother who doesn't have any help sowing the fields. When several conventional plans fall through, the woman decides to bring in a patient from the local mental hospital to drive the tractor and sow the fields. Angus, a gentle giant, slowly gains the trust of Emaline and her mother through his hard work and his kindness to people and animals alike. Despite the town's grumblings about how dangerous Angus must be, he is allowed to continue working on the farm, but not without enduring much cruelty from neighbors and townspeople. It is only when he performs the ultimate act of heroism that others in the town finally recognize Angus's worth as a human being. Emaline is a rich character full of conflicting emotions about her father, her mother, and her strange new family. Subtle in its themes and organization, this book is pure pleasure, offering lessons about love, loyalty, and loss.–Julie Webb, Shelby County High School, Shelbyville, KY
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

Gr. 6-8. After Emaline, 11, is crippled by an accident with her father's tractor in 1965, Daddy kills her beloved dog, Prince, and walks away from the farm on the Saskatchewan prairie. Mom takes in Angus from the local mental hospital to help with the farm work, but the neighbors jeer and complain about the "sub-human" crazy man on the loose. Emaline never denies Angus' illness, but she sees his kindness and strength, and they help each other with their work and with their grief. Narrated by Emaline in short lines of free verse, the story is a very easy read, its plain, lyrical words capturing the beauty of the flat prairie under the huge sky and the sounds of wind, trains, and coyotes in the night, as well as the harsh community prejudice. The poetry is in the details, both immediate and universal: Angus helps Emaline tie her shoelaces, and he wakes her to the glory of the northern lights. Hazel Rochman
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

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Customer Reviews

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Most helpful customer reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars so much rich content with such spare language Sep 16 2007
Format:Paperback
The Crazy Man is one of the best books I've read lately. I was left breathless by the way Pam Porter takes us directly into Em's dilemma. It was an eye-opener as to what is possible with children's literature.

As I believe I said elsewhere once, I was at the book launch & unaware this was KidsLit.

Having grown up on the Prairies, I found myself plunged into the authentic landscape. The compassionate way Pam aims a magnifying glass on the common occurences of farm life---loss of limb, animal death, the negative labeling of unusual people, the community grapevine---startled & enlightened me. She has the voice of a farm kid dealing with significant life issues down pat. I feel like I know Em's family, like she could be any of the families I grew up with.

A single metaphor for the book in my own experience is the time I visited neighbours & opened the wrong fridge. I was startled to find huge jars of blood. This was casually explained as hogs', for making sausage. Such are the realities of farm life. Things are often brutal, but just are.

Yet any city person could identify with the emotional heart of the story.

The writing style was another revelation. I didn't know so much rich content could be conveyed with such spare language. It was a writing lesson as well as a great read.

Reisa
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4.0 out of 5 stars Extremely Interesting Dec 25 2011
By Owen
Format:Paperback
This is an interesting book that touched me. It is told by a twelve year old girl, Emiline. I feel a lot of sympathy for Emaline. But Angus a crazy man changed the way Emiline sees things. I would recommend this book to anyone 8 or older going through problems.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars thought-provoking July 4 2007
By Marsha Skrypuch TOP 1000 REVIEWER
Format:Paperback
I enjoyed this novel, but there were a few things that irritated me about it. One was the implied attitude that the neighbours who were concerned about communism were a bit looney. Seeing as in 1960 a bunch of new immigrants in the area would have lost their entire families under Stalin's regime, I thought that showed breathtaking ignorance on the author's part. She slightly made up for that with the Wheat Board incident, but she could have handled the issue of communism still with a child's voice and still accurately had she wanted to. For example, Em could have noted that the people who seemed afraid of communism had accents, or something. And then she could have had an insight.

The reason that the communism issue bothers me so much is because it is an accepted "truth" now in popular novels and films that fear of communism is something to be made fun of. One hopes that brilliant writers transcend truisms.

Which leads in to a second irritation. Em seemed too "good" -- she didn't have prejudices yet her mother was intolerant of Mei and her family. That didn't ring true to me. I could see her having initial hesitations and then finding out she was wrong, but it seemed a bit too pat that she had no hesitations.

The incident about Prime Minister Pearson/President Johnson annoyed me too, because the author was playing up Canadians' nationally accepted form of racism: anti-Americanism. I thought it was a cheap shot. And seeing that the author is American-born herself, you'd think she'd be more sensitive, but perhaps she's like the reformed smoker. <s>

These are small nits though. In all, it was a wonderful read. I'm still thinking about Em and Angus.
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