Spider Sparrow has always been different. Abandoned as an infant in a lambing pen and adopted by a kindly shepherd and his wife, Spider’s life is unusual from the start. As he grows, it becomes clear that he is not like other he can't walk, talk, or learn like them. But Spider has a he can imitate perfectly the sounds of animals. The animals–and his community–love him for it.
For Spider, the world may be a difficult place, but he lives each day with joy and courage. And those who meet Spider will never forget him.
Dick King-Smith was born and raised in Gloucestershire, England, surrounded by pet animals. After twenty years as a farmer, he turned to teaching and then to writing children's books.
Dick writes mostly about animals: farmyard fantasy, as he likes to call it, often about pigs, his special favorites. He enjoys writing for children, meeting the children who read his books, and knowing that they get enjoyment from what he does.
Among his well-loved books is Babe, The Gallant Pig, which was recently made into a major motion picture, and was nominated for an Academy Award.
Dick lived with his wife in a small 17th-century cottage, about three miles from the house where he was born.
More literary than most of the author's stories about fantastic animals. No 'magic' but, rather, a magical fable. Reads as if the author heard tell of this boy who lived in the olden days and interviewed some descendants of the characters for details, and then worked up the story.
Lovely. Sentimental, but not at all saccharine.
Not sure who the audience is. Shelved as Juvenile, but to me it seems more like a novella for adults. Readers of any age who want to stretch their brain muscles a bit should give it go, I guess. Perhaps fans of The Snow Goose by Paul Gallico would be among the most likely to appreciate it.
The pix by Peter Bailey are very much like those of Edward Ardizzone, who is beloved by many of us for his work with Eleanor Farjeon and others.
(Still editing this review days later, plz forgive... but I keep thinking about the story....) --- Reread a copy found in a Little Free Library. Review and rating stand. Deserves to be more widely available - do check openlibrary.org as I believe an archived copy is there (to read for free).
Well-written and well-done. I really enjoyed reading about a *real* working farm in war-era England. The characters are all realistic, and I listened to the audio version and loved all the different voices.
This book turned out to be a little different from what I was expecting--although now that I think about it, I'm not sure what I *was* expecting :-) I think maybe I thought it would be more light-hearted, without any serious issues. I don't mean to imply that it is gloom-and-doomy (there are a couple of sad scenes but most of the book isn't that way)--it just had a slightly different tone than I thought it would have. Although I was never really *engrossed* by it, I did enjoy it and feels it merits 4 stars (at least) for the quality.
ENGLISH: This is the second time I have read this book. A shepherd finds and adopts a baby who has been left in his sheepfold. The boy is mentally retarded and never manages to walk or talk properly, but he exhibits an impressive empathy with all kinds of animals. The way he is treated by the workers and owners of the farm where his father works is exemplary.
ESPAÑOL: Esta es la segunda vez que he leído este libro. Un pastor encuentra un niño que alguien ha dejado en su redil, y lo adopta. El niño es retrasado mental, y nunca consigue andar o hablar bien, pero exhibe una impresionante empatía con todo tipo de animales. Es modélica la forma en que le tratan los trabajadores y los dueños de la granja donde trabaja su padre.
A book I should have read when I was a child, but as an adult it still thoroughly entertained me. I found myself really warming to Spider, an orphaned, mentally handicapped boy taken in by a shepherd and his wife, with an innate ability to communicate with animals. Despite the age for which this was intended, Dick King Smith never once patronises his reader and instead takes them on a magical journey along with Spider.
I really enjoyed this book. It's a quick read for an adult. It's set just before and during the second world war on a farm. It's a bit of a foundling fairy tale because an old Shepherd finds a baby boy with a note 'please look after this lamb' during lambing season late one night. The man (Tom) and his wife (Kathie) were never able to have children of their own and they adopt him.
Spider (as the boy is known) has some sort of severe global developmental delay and the farm and his adoptive parents are the best place he could be, and he lives his best life. He is loved and he is happy. He's given jobs he finds meaningful ('crowstarving' being the main one, which is scaring off birds like crows and jackdaws from eating seed that has just been planted.)
It ends with Spiders death, presumeably due to heart failure. The doctor found earlier that he had a heart murmur, but he only told Tom, who kept it to himself so as not to worry Kathie. Both parents only cared for their sons happiness, and had begun to worry what would become of him as they grew older. His life was full, and he enjoyed him sen. His parents loved him. Probably the best thing his birth mum did was leave him in the sheep pen. In doing so she gave Spider to the people and environment which would be best for him.
It's very sad, but it's also one of them 'idyllic life in the English countryside' books.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
This book is an absolutely heartwarming story that highlights the best of human kindness—both toward people and animals. Some readers may find Spider, the special boy, difficult to understand at first, but by the end he will melt hearts just as he does for the people on the farm. I had always thought Dick King-Smith only wrote light, funny stories about children and animals, but this book goes far beyond that—it’s a moving tribute to compassion for all creatures, great and small. The ending remains unexpected until the very last chapter. It made me want to cry, but like Spider’s father, I knew his son was truly happy.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Very engaging book about a retarded boy living on a farm in the Wiltshire area of England before and during World War II. Despite his challenges, he is happy and productive and has a few exceptional experiences. Ending seems a bit rushed, but sometimes things work that way. I would love to see a movie - or at least have the chance to hear the audiobook version if it gets the dialect right. A brief but helpful glossary is included.
This title pleasantly surprised me. King-Smith shows us, through this story set in rural England before and during World War II, that the small details of everyday life can reveal the most important things in life. A careful and easy-to-read literature that accurately and in detail portrays rural life of the time.
A great mix of young adult literature with historical fiction makes this book interesting for any age.
Shows that strength and talent doesn't have to fit into a template and that being different isn't a weakness. Interesting main character. sweet story. Slightly dated (not just because of when it's set) and introduces a lot of characters at the beginning, which is quite complicated and unclear who is who.
This book is on the year 6 school reading list. My daughter didn't like the title or the names of the characters so it was a struggle to get her to look at it. I thought it was a gentle read. It made me smile.
Il libro è scritto bene, scorrevole. Ogni tanto, secondo me, c'è qualche perifrasi di troppo, che fa perdere il filo del discorso. Contenuto interessante e ricco di significati. Finale troppo triste, ma solo leggendo potrete capire di che parlo.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
A pastoral tale about the life of a foundling boy left with a childless shepherd couple. He is cared for and helped to find his place with the backdrop of the interwar years and the second world war in rural England.
Although named John Joseph to honor his adopted parents' fathers, he's called Spider throughout the book because of his unusual gait. I liked this story and the way his talents are emphasized alongside his disabilities. He does vocal mimicry of animals, finds acceptance in the animal world, makes animal carvings and is a calm, happy presence in the lives of the adults on the farm.
There's some real awkwardness for the modern reader in the myriad ways his intelligence is referred to - everything from retarded to idiot savant and another half dozen coloquial ways of calling him mentally slow. I was surprised that this was written in 1998 because the style of the writing feels older. Although plot-wise it's a fairly gentle story, conservative parents may not like the use of bitch to refer to female animals and the way the baby is referred to as a bastard in an early chapter. The language feels right for the setting, but most parents aren't going out of their way to introduce those words through children's lit. The author captures dialect in ways that are lovely but also may make this book more difficult for younger or TESOL readers.
The ending, Spider's death of a heart murmer at age 16, as foretold to his father by a doctor, feels kind of abrupt. His physical fragility is remarked upon throughout the book, as is his relative safety compared to peers going off to war. He's found dead with an expression of contentment and to the family that wished only for his happiness it is consolation enough.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Between the world wars somewhere in the English countryside, a shepherd finds a baby left amongst his lambing ewes and takes it home to his wife. They've never been able to have their own children, so they adopt him and raise him as their own. But Spider Sparrow is different from the local children. He's 'slow' and isn't allowed in school, but he also has an uncanny relationship to all animals; they instinctively trust him and he loves them all in return. This comes in handy several times on The Mister's farm-estate, from comforting ewes in labor to gentling wild broncos.
This is a quiet story, in which not much happens but that doesn't take away from the enjoyment of it. It's cozy without being saccharine, bittersweet without being maudlin. A perfect read for a snowy day with some tea by your side.
1926-1942 England. As a baby Spider Sparrow was left in a barn. He was taken in and raised by the Sparrows. As he grew, everyone realized that Spider was different. He couldn't talk like all the other children, but he had a special way of communicating with animals. All animals, even wild ones, trusted him. As he got older, his parents decided he needed a job. When he's asked to be "soljur" and protect the crops from the bad crows that want to eat it, Spider can't wait to start.
The story's action focuses on the farm in England and makes brief mentions of what it happening in the war.
This one is a departure from what Mr. King-Smith usually writes. At the beginning it felt like a cross between Silas Marner and An Incident at Hawk Hill so I thought I would love it. It also has a fairy tale feel about it which is always a bonus with me. But the ending was not what I wanted and that put me off the book quite a bit. I did love the descriptions of life in a small English village during WWII and the characters contained in that village.
I haven't been the greatest fan of Dick King-Smith, although I've only read a few of his books. This has been the best I've read so far. A moving, simple story.
A foundling, Spider Sparrow isn’t like others; he doesn’t speak much and he shuffles along. But in spite of his infirmities, Spider has a special affinity for animals.
And that’s the story. The story of a boy who seems handicapped but who uses his strengths to make a lovely life for himself.
Lovely quiet story of rural 1940's England. Not terribly plot-driven, but the characters make up for it. Great for animal lovers. Ending was a bit strange, and somewhat poorly explained, or else I would have given it four stars.