It is necessary for parents to know that this is a book of easy-to-understand chapters written by Sharon Creech (Walk Two Moons) who won the Newbery Medal award. It was about memos that asked him to be taken care of until a young lady who fell asleep at the front door of a farmer without children, and an unknown author of that memo came back. He is. The tension in the story comes from a new caregiver of a boy who also seeks to provide a considerate and exciting family while trying to find out who left the boy. This book may be afraid of abandonment - who left a child in the porch of a stranger's house? - But the couple is very thoughtful and kind, the boys' life is so idyllic, the overall tone is almost positive. Both the couple and the boy have both frustration and anxiety, but there is absolutely no violence. For some children - and for parents - the solutions of this story may be emotional, they are not what they are looking for
A young couple without children who lives on a farm wakes up one day and sees a 6 or 7 year old boy sleeping in the front door. Nearby notes asks them to look after 'Jacob' until they can come back to him. A couple of John and Malta soon discovered that Jacob was silent but they had an incredible number of days and he had an incredible affinity for music and communication with many animals around the farm It is now possible. John and Malta did their utmost to make Jacob's life happy and to provide a loving house, but he knew that he might not be with them for a long time, and they I felt Jacob and the responsibility to find the people they left. Should they teach neighbors and people in the town how this rare but abnormal child will begin nursing care? What will happen if the author of the memo returns to Jacob?
The heart of this wonderful story is a mystery. Who is the boy in the pouch? Where are you from? As the story progressed, Sharon Crich did a wonderful job of building tension, anxiously looking for his identity while balancing the happy life episode of the boy on the farm.
These chapters are short, the essay is simple and straightforward - like the humble countryman that it draws. However, the hero has real complexity, and as circumstances and circumstances change, they are easily related to emotional change. For young readers, this book is a good book, they will like this story and a general description of rural life (in an unspecified year)
Families can talk about John and Marta's decision to learn about Jacob's identity from friends and people in the town - or I know little about him. Should they tell the truth immediately to the sheriff?
The only modern conveniences mentioned in books are cars and phones. Do you think it is difficult to live in the world without television, computer, mobile phone? Do you want to visit the farm or live on the farm?
If a boy like Jacob will appear in your house for a while, what would you teach him? How do you communicate with him?
What do you think Jacob will do after the main part is over? How do you think Jacob is affecting John and Malta?
Two men, John and Malta, found a boy in the pouch of his porch and John told Malta to take care of the boy. Then Malta gave the boy food, but he gave the beagle dog owned by Maltese and John just food. Then Martha asked the boy what his name was, but he just placed his hand on the table. Then after the boy was still midnight, Malta and John prepared the bed for him. The next day John went to town to find the boy 's parents, while Malta taught the boy how to play the song using a ladder with a spoon. Then John came back to see the boy playing the song. After many days, I saw Malta and John talking with animals rather than talking about them, and they noticed that he was talking through eavesdropping. Then John told the sheriff about the missing child, and he promised that he would go to their house to see where the children 's parents were. But one day the car ran to their home, a thin guy walked, told the boy he was his son and took the boy away.
In this story, Beagle dogs and cattle are important for boys. I know that the Beagle dog has been affected by my older sister's dog, but I do not know the origin of the cow. Ironically, six months after I finished the boy at the pouch, my granddaughter began working on a cow farm, in particular she was clinging to a particular cow, and she often asked her I put it behind. A boy in the story "rides" the cow