Gr 5–8—The most adventure Ben sees on a daily basis is in the stop-motion movies he makes alone in his room, and that's the way he likes it. However, his safe, sedentary life is altered when Ben's parents whisk him and his sister away on a road trip to an isolated cabin in the woods. His parents claim they are on vacation, but Ben begins to think they are on the lam. He pieces together clues to discover that millions of dollars were mistakenly deposited into his parents' bank account, and they've chosen to run off with it. He is torn between turning in his parents to the authorities, thereby ending the misery of being on the run, and staying loyal to them, thereby seeing if money (even if stolen) can indeed buy happiness. This is an adventure story with broad appeal, from high-speed police chases, to wilderness survival. There are a number of extended, suspenseful scenes, including one in which the boy and his sister must survive on their own in the woods for several days. Ben is a well-developed, sympathetic character, grappling with a cruel father, weight problems, and evolving confusion about his place in his family, with age-appropriate confusion and insecurity. VERDICT This is a story that will appeal to avid consumers of adventure stories and reluctant readers alike.—Jenna Lanterman, formerly at The Calhoun School and Mary McDowell Friends School, New York City
On the run from police after they steal $7.2 million accidentally deposited into their bank account, twelve-year-old Ben's parents leave him and his younger sister Olive on their own in a creepy old cabin in the middle of the Australian bush. Ben (who only gradually learns what his parents have done) sees the irony in what has happened: his father, who runs a wrecking yard, "was a wrecker. That's what he did. He wrecked stuff…Cars, trucks, motorbikes, Ben's life, their family. Themselves. They wrecked themselves and they left Ben and Olive to deal with the mess." Ben finds a copy of My Side of the Mountain in the cabin, appropriate—and useful—reading since he and Olive are now essentially in the midst of their own survival drama. Bancks's third-person narrative works effectively in lacing the propulsive survival story with the ethical questions young Ben ponders. If his father (and grandfather) were criminals, Ben wonders, what kind of person does that make him? "Is it possible to outrun the blood you have inherited, to become somebody else?" A satisfying story that will pull readers in and get them thinking about big ideas. Dean Schneider
On the run from police, twelve-year-old Ben's parents leave him and younger sister Olive on their own in a cabin in the Australian bush. Ben finds a copy of My Side of the Mountain, appropriate--and useful--reading since he and Olive are now in the midst of their own survival drama. The third-person narrative effectively laces the propulsive survival story with ethical questions.

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