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Teen Fiction - Family & Relationships, Teen Fiction - Fantasy
Wish Riders by Patrick Jennings — book cover

Wish Riders

by Patrick Jennings
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Overview

Fifteen-year-old Dusty, a ward of the state, is forced to work in a logging camp during the Depression. Despite the bleakness of her life, spirited Dusty dreams of escape.

One day, a mysterious seagull delivers some unusual seeds to Dusty. Her whole life changes when she plants them. Perhaps it is the strength of her wishes, or the magic of the forest, but some unknown power transforms the tiny seeds into an astonishing creature—and a possible means of deliverance. Now Dusty and her friends have a way to navigate the enchanted, though dangerous, forest, and escape the wretched existence they’ve been trapped in all their lives.

Richly layered with fairy-tale lore and steeped in both the familiar and the darker elements of the Cinderella story, Patrick Jennings’s inspired novel weaves a compelling tale about finding freedom, and finding oneself.

Synopsis


Fifteen-year-old Dusty, a ward of the state, is forced to work in a logging camp during the Depression.  Despite the bleakness of her life, spirited Dusty dreams of escape.

One day, a mysterious seagull delivers some unusual seeds to Dusty. Her whole life changes when she plants them. Perhaps it is the strength of her wishes, or the magic of the forest, but some unknown power transforms the tiny seeds into an astonishing creature-and a possible means of deliverance. Now Dusty and her friends have a way to navigate the enchanted, though dangerous, forest, and escape the wretched existence they've been trapped in all their lives.

Richly layered with fairy-tale lore and steeped in both the familiar and the darker elements of the Cinderella story, Patrick Jennings's inspired novel weaves a compelling tale about finding freedom, and finding oneself.

 

VOYA

At fifteen years of age, Edith (Dusty) Kelly is forced to work in a Depression-era logging camp as one of several foster children exploited for free labor by the money-grubbing Smith family. Mr. Smith, the philandering camp superintendent, is often gone while his bitter wife runs the camp, relying on its isolated location to keep her ill-treated charges from running away. When Dusty plants magical seeds, botanical horses spring up and carry her and four friends toward their hopes for a better life. They are an odd assortment: Sonny and Jed, hoping to reunite with their father; Hero, pregnant with Mr. Smith's child; Perdie, looking for her mother in an insane asylum; and Dusty, whose mother is dead and whose sailor father abandoned her after attempting sexual abuse. Deep in the woods, the runaways are temporary guests of Hodag, a magical, mysterious old woman who teaches them about Nature. When their plant horses begin to die, the teens discover that they are to be prisoners once more and escape on their expiring steeds. Eventually the five companions must split up. The boys head to their father's farm, and the girls to the coastal city where Perdie will look for her mother, Hero will search for a husband, and Dusty will look for her father. When the three girls find Dusty's father, still aboard his ship but blinded and remarried, the story comes full circle, although many issues remain unresolved. A blend of magical realism, fairy tale, and ecoliterature, Jennings's story is moving and engaging but makes unexpected jumps in genre at times. Harsh and soft aspects of the story sometimes seem incongruous with each other.

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Editorials

VOYA - James Blasingame

At fifteen years of age, Edith (Dusty) Kelly is forced to work in a Depression-era logging camp as one of several foster children exploited for free labor by the money-grubbing Smith family. Mr. Smith, the philandering camp superintendent, is often gone while his bitter wife runs the camp, relying on its isolated location to keep her ill-treated charges from running away. When Dusty plants magical seeds, botanical horses spring up and carry her and four friends toward their hopes for a better life. They are an odd assortment: Sonny and Jed, hoping to reunite with their father; Hero, pregnant with Mr. Smith's child; Perdie, looking for her mother in an insane asylum; and Dusty, whose mother is dead and whose sailor father abandoned her after attempting sexual abuse. Deep in the woods, the runaways are temporary guests of Hodag, a magical, mysterious old woman who teaches them about Nature. When their plant horses begin to die, the teens discover that they are to be prisoners once more and escape on their expiring steeds. Eventually the five companions must split up. The boys head to their father's farm, and the girls to the coastal city where Perdie will look for her mother, Hero will search for a husband, and Dusty will look for her father. When the three girls find Dusty's father, still aboard his ship but blinded and remarried, the story comes full circle, although many issues remain unresolved. A blend of magical realism, fairy tale, and ecoliterature, Jennings's story is moving and engaging but makes unexpected jumps in genre at times. Harsh and soft aspects of the story sometimes seem incongruous with each other.

Children's Literature - Kathleen Isaacs

Sent to work in a depression era logging camp after her parents disappeared, fifteen-year-old Dusty is visited by a seagull bringing the seeds of a wish horse—a moss-covered bush that moves and behaves just as her real horse once did. With five such horses, she and her fellow child workers escape through the forest, learning woodcraft from a mysterious old woman who shelters them for a while. Fearing that she is a witch, they leave her, too, the boys going to rejoin their father on a farm, the girls returning to the port city where Dusty finds her father, a changed man, still living on the boat on which he had sailed away after her mother's death. The book begins as realistic historical fiction, with telling detail about the clear cutting of the old-growth woods, logging camp life, and the economic hard times of the 1930s. The fantasy and fairy tale elements may come as a surprise to the teen reader, especially the darker allusions that are often not part of traditional stories reworked for children. Missing his wife, who vanished in a ferry accident, Dusty's father had made a sexual advance to his daughter before he sailed off on his boat. Dusty's "sister" Hero, another worker, is carrying the camp manager's child. In this imaginative treatment of the adage, "If wishes were horses, then beggars would ride," experienced readers may see traces of Cinderella and Hansel and Gretel, as well as Donkeyskin and more. Others may simply be confused.

Kirkus Reviews

Once again, Jennings offers an odd amalgam of historical fiction (set in Depression times) and fantasy. Unfortunately, the fantastic elements are not well integrated, while realistic ones threaten to overwhelm the flow of the story. Edith, 15, known as Dusty, has been abandoned and now lives and works in an isolated logging camp. Desperate to escape, she finds a most unusual method when she discovers a horse made of moss and plants. When more such horses appear, she takes it as a sign that some of the other children there are also meant to leave. Five of them take off on a harrowing journey through mostly uninhabited woods. A brief sojourn with a wild woods-woman teaches them survival skills, but also seems to threaten their emotional survival. Additional details include a mild romance that turns sour, the impregnation of two characters by Dusty's adoptive father, the discovery of the suicide of the mother of one of Dusty's companions and the revelation that Dusty's father made sexual advances to her before abandoning her. Well-written but overwrought. (Fiction. 12-14)

Book Details

Published
June 1, 2008
Publisher
Hyperion Books for Children
Pages
288
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9781423100157

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