Join Books.org — it's free

Children's Fiction, Family
The Way to Schenectady by Linda Hendry β€” book cover

The Way to Schenectady

by Linda Hendry
Available on Bookshop Write a review

Books.org participates in affiliate programs including Bookshop.org and the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program. We may earn a commission from qualifying purchases made through links on this page, at no additional cost to you.

Log in to track your reading progress.

Synopsis

Twelve-year-old Jane Peeler is about to embark on a summer ritual: the family car trip. Along with her two younger brothers, Bill and Bernie, Jane will endure traffic jams, singalongs, and fights over who gets the window on a two-day car trip to New England. With help from her Walkman, it may not be too bad, even if her chain-smoking, grumpy grandmother is coming along. But during a stop at a gas station, the kids meet Marty – a kind, penniless old man with a problem. How will he get to his brother’s funeral in Schenectady the next day? Jane would like to help him out – but how? Bringing a friend along on holiday is one thing, but a total stranger?

Readers will delight in the hilarious detours the Peelers must make to get their newest passenger, and themselves, to their destination on time.

Children's Literature

Combine three siblings, one father, and one hard-to-get-along-with grandmother and you have the makings of this book. While it typically includes rivalry between the brother and sister, it reaches beyond that to address current social issues. The main character is Jane Peeler, a pre-teenager who must make a crucial choice between saving time and reaching her destination sooner, or helping a homeless and hopeless stranger. She recalls lessons that her mother taught her and relies upon her own judgment. In the end she makes the more compassionate choice which unexpectedly helps to soften her grandmother's brazenness. The overall moral? Sometimes you have to go with the flow of life, because it can't always be planned.

About the Author, Linda Hendry

A columnist and novelist, Richard Scrimger grew up in Toronto, always writing but never really considering it a career, until after the birth of his first two children, twins, when he discovered the only time he could seriously write was during their naps. His style clearly demonstrates the influence of his experiences as a waiter in Toronto’s upscale restaurants, and as a stay-at-home father to his four children.

Genuinely witty, his work can be described as multi-dimensional - comic elements ride upon the surface, supported by varying levels of seriousness underneath.

Columns detailing Richard’s adventures in parenthood have been published in The Globe and Mail, Chatelaine, and Today’s Parent, and were compiled in a collection titled Still Life with Children. His first adult novel, Crosstown, was a finalist for the City of Toronto Book Award. His first children’s novel, The Nose from Jupiter, won the 10th annual Mr. Christie Book Award, was selected as an A.B.A. Kid’s Pick of the List title, and was a finalist for the Ontario Library Association’s 1999 Silver Birch Award.

Richard Scrimger is also the author of The Way to Schenectady about the adventures of the Peeler family on the road; Mystical Rose, an adult novel; and a sequel to The Nose from Jupiter entitled A Nose for Adventure. In 2001 Scrimger published Bun Bun’s Birthday a picture book illustrated by Gillian Johnson, and a Peeler Christmas story called Of Mice and Nutcrackers. He and his family live in Cobourg, Ontario.

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Log in to write one.

Book Details

Published
October 1, 1998
Publisher
Tundra
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780887764271

More by Linda Hendry

Similar books