Jim Harrison wrote only one
book for children, and he wrote it for his grandson, but anyone who wants to
understand this outstanding Michigan poet’s background and inspiration will
learn a lot from The Boy Who Ran to the Woods.
At the age of seven, a fight
with a little girl put Jimmy in the hospital for a month. He was tied to the
bed at night. Both eyes were bandaged for a full week, but the sight in his
injured eye could not be saved.
It took months for the blind eye to heal and by the time he entered second grade he was sure that all the other boys and girls were staring at him. His father bought him a young dog and Jimmy would hide in the thickets with his dog for days at a time. He became a wild and unruly boy....
He does not want to learn to
read – does not want to be in school at all -- but finally, thanks to a father's understanding, a love for the birds and
other wildlife he encounters in nature begin to cure the boy’s unhappiness and
give him a hunger for learning.
The Boy Who Ran to the
Woods,
by Jim Harrison; illustrated
by Jim Pohrt
Harcover with dust jacket,
$18.95
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