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.