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The Mailbox

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For readers of Unbroken and Flags of Our Fathers , The Mailbox is a sympathetic portrayal of veterans and the burdens they carry throughout their lives.

   Vernon Culligan had been dead to the town of Draydon, Virginia, so long that when the crusty Vietnam vet finally died, only one person noticed. Twelve-year-old Gabe grew up in the foster care system until a social worker located his Uncle Vernon two years before. When he comes home to discover that his uncle has died of a heart attack, he's terrifed of going back into the system--so he tells no one. The next day, he discovers a strange note in his
   I HAVE A SECRET. DO NOT BE AFRAID.
   And his uncle's body is gone.
   Thus begins a unique correspondence destined to save the two people that depended on Vernon for everything. Through flashbacks, we learn about Gabe and Vernon's relationship, and how finding each other saved them both from lives of suffering. But eventually, Vernon's death will be discovered, and how will Gabe and the mystery note writer learn to move forward?
   The Mailbox is not a story about death--though it begins with a death. It's also not a story about Vietnam vets, although the author works with Vietnam veterans and wrote this novel, in part, to illuminate their sacrifices and suffering. The Mailbox is a story about connections--about how two people in need can save each other.

Praise for The Mailbox :

Junior Library Guild Selection
A Bank Street College Best Children's Books of the Year
A Librarians' Choices Booklist Selection

“Shafer’s narrative is heartfelt, earnest and moving . . . and conveys the power of memory to help heal wounds.” —Kirkus Reviews

“Warm and moving, it is an evocative picture of the weblike nature of human existence and the interconnectedness of seemingly disparate experiences.” —School Library Journal

192 pages, Paperback

First published October 10, 2006

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1536 people want to read

About the author

Audrey Shafer

7 books5 followers

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5 stars
648 (31%)
4 stars
736 (35%)
3 stars
447 (21%)
2 stars
155 (7%)
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66 (3%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 313 reviews
Profile Image for Cindy.
431 reviews15 followers
March 30, 2014
This book was on my Goodreads recommendations list; thanks for that feature! The book is intended for the upper elementary grades, but I was so moved by the story and wondered how a young person could understand the depth of Gabe's pain. But then I realized it would be a perfect book for the child of a veteran. Gabe's Uncle Vernon and his friend Smitty have PTSD, but it's from the Viet Nam war, maybe giving a little breathing room for a parent and child.

Have a tissue handy!
Profile Image for Bethany.
17 reviews2 followers
November 23, 2012
Love it. have read it three times. Not sure who the intended audience is though (is this really a kid's book?). But I love it.
Profile Image for Kasper.
361 reviews21 followers
September 6, 2014
I finished this book in less than 2 hours? It's a really quick read. Unfortunately, I also chose to read in a public coffee shop which was a huge mistake as I cried through about two-thirds of it. I don't think it was just me being sentimental, at least not entirely - there were some genuinely moving moments between Gabe and Smitty and, even more emotional, Gabe and his memories of Uncle Vernon. Shafer does a fantastic job at winding the two (three if you count Vernon and Smitty) relationships together without getting them confused or losing one voice to the other. She also knows how to wield a wonderful set of characters with grace and I was very impressed by that. Diverse cast, too! I was so pleased that not everyone was white. I do think the ending was rather rosy given the (sort of sweet, child-like) darkness of the rest of the novel. But I still cried through it too and it's a middle grade novel, so I'm not sure what else Shafer would have/could have done done. Really a minor complaint. Overall, a great book.
Profile Image for Jessi.
24 reviews
March 8, 2018
This wonderful story of Gabe, his uncle Vernon, and his friends had me laughing and crying! The book itself appears to have been written for a younger audience, but don’t judge the book by its cover. It deals with a lot of heavier things - PTSD, grief, coming of age, and love. Oh, and I don’t mean romantic love - I mean real Love. Love that, when shown, spoken, and felt freely and from the heart, truly defines humanity.
6 reviews16 followers
October 4, 2015
***SPOILER ALERT***
Have you ever thought about living without your parents? Imagine what life would be like if you no one there to take care of you, what would you do? If you only had your teachers and your best friend. This is Gabe's story, it might not be a true story but the author sure does make it seem like one. This a realistic fiction book.

The setting of this book is mainly in a house where everything takes place in present day. Gabe is the main character he used to live in foster care from home to home and then his uncle was found and Gabe went to live with him. The type of conflict in this story is Person Vs.Society. When he goes to live with his uncle Gabe has started school and his first day of school coming home he finds his uncle dead on his desk chair and covers him with a blanket and goes to bed not knowing what to do. The next day Gabe thinks it has all gone away but when he sees his uncle not on the chair, not knowing where he is or what to do, he thought to himself that if he were to tell anyone that they would he killed his uncle which he died of a heart attack.

So far reading this book I think this story might of needed a lot of time to write it has many details and very descriptive writing. In the book when each of the characters talk or write letters which there's a lot of letter writing in this book. That's one of the reasons why I said this book is so descriptive. I also find this book very interesting because the amount of chores Gabe was given is actually is really crazy because most kids have simple little things like having to clean their rooms, taking out the trash or washing dishes. Now I know that his uncle was old but Gabe has to make bank deposits and took out money, shop for groceries, take out the garbage, and buy stamps at the post office.

My opinion on this book is I really liked it, mainly because of the mysterious card writer that went by the name of "Smitty". Smitty is my favorite character in this book because he/she helped Gabe get though everything just fine, and because he/she gave Gabe a big black dog named Guppy and even though Gabe doesn't really know who this person might be maybe his dad or maybe Mr. Boehm his teacher. Although I don't know if Smitty is a boy or girl I still think it might be a boy. When Smitty writes a letter to Gabe asked something about if Smitty was his/her real name and didn't have that much of an answer.

In conclusion Gabe has been very brave though his uncle's death and who knows what his life would have turned out like without Smitty and all the other support that he has had though the tough times like from his teacher Mr. Boehm and Ms. Pickering. This is one of the best books I have ever and I hope to read more books from Audrey Shafer.
Profile Image for Katie Cat Books.
1,163 reviews
August 20, 2017
Boy. Dog. Vietnam.

Story: 12 year old Gabe Culligan has been in and out of the foster system for years. Then his uncle is found and he goes to live with him in a valley in Virginia. Uncle Vernon is rough and gruff but a good uncle to Gabe. One day Gabe returns home from school to find his uncle dead on the floor. He doesn't know what to do so he does nothing. Then a note appears in the mailbox addressed to him. Mystery after mystery unfold in this middle grade novel.

Characters: Gabe is young and polite and also very ingenious. After his uncle dies, he has to come up with ways to keep his teachers and social worker and townsfolk from knowing that he is living alone without a parent or guardian. While the uncle is found dead in chapter 1, he is a main character in the whole book, brought up in flashbacks and dialogues. In this way we get to know him, his life experiences and his effect on Gabe.

Language: I really liked the first 75% of this book. It was an easy and light read, great for middle grade. Then the climax of the novel and the ending happened so fast, that events were not as well clear or developed. Perhaps this book should also have had a section on the end with resources on foster care and the Vietnam War and PTSD.

It was good. I wish the author would write more books because this book shows real potential.
Profile Image for R..
72 reviews6 followers
December 2, 2008
This was an unexpected find.

Were it not for Landen's book club, I'd never have picked it up, and were it not for a Thanksgiving away I'd never have read it.

The story is about Gabe, a ward of the state, who goes to live with his Uncle Vernon, a distinguished veteran, who is about as crusty as they get, and doesn't like to toot his own horn. One day Gabe returns home to find Uncle Vernon dead, and that's were I was hooked.

The young man does his best to keep that from those around him, working to establish his life - in respect of his Uncle's guidance - and to avoid loosing his newly found home, to be put into "the system" again.

The writting and style are easy and technically adept. It was a quick read, and I often attribute that to the best writters, because even Dan Brown's book was hard to put down, BUT it was formulaic in it lay out to be a series of short reads - which worked for his story.

I'll read it again, found myself overcome at times, so if you're a softy - its not a book to read around little kids or on a company lunch break.

Profile Image for Melanie Hetrick.
4,628 reviews51 followers
April 14, 2009
When young Gable (Gabe) finally finds a home with his Uncle Vernon, he settles into a not-so-ordinary routine for daily life. But that's what comes from living with a hardened Vietnam veteran. Both uncle and nephew quickly get used to each other, but peace is shattered when Vernon suddenly dies. Fearful that things will change for the worse (i.e. foster homes again), and consumed with grief for the uncle he barely had a chance to know, Gabe tells no one about his uncle's death.

But someone knows; and that someone has a secret. Gabe and the stranger begin an odd mailbox exchange communication. And the stranger gives Gabe the best friend a boy could ask for, especially when lonely: a dog. But who is this person? And what's his secret?

How long can Gabe keep the situation under wraps?

This book was beautiful! I was really disappointed that it wasn't even a Newbery honor the year Criss Cross won (which I hated!).
Profile Image for Christina.
693 reviews41 followers
May 31, 2010
A heart-breaking story of Gabe, a boy who finds a home with his "crusty" Uncle Vernon, a Vietnam vet, after years of being shuttled around from one foster home to another. Gabe arrives home one day to find his uncle dead on the floor. Confused by this turn of events and not ready to say "good-bye," he crawls under a blanket and spends the night with his uncle's body. When he arrives home from school the next day, he finds a mysterious note in his mailbox and his uncle's body gone. Despite this unlikely chain of events, Gabe is a completely believable character who behaves exactly like a shy, confused sixth-grade boy might. It's hard to peg the best audience for this book. The Mailbox is a thin book marked as having a fifth-grade reading level. On the other hand, the realistic depiction of post traumatic stress syndrome in war veterans -- and its causes -- will be hard for many fifth-graders and even some sixth-graders to confront.
Profile Image for Lisa.
96 reviews1 follower
July 3, 2008
A 6th grade boy finds his uncle and guardian dead, then the body disappears and he tries to keep the secret and avoid foster homes again. When it is revealed, he finds he has more friends than he thought and that his uneducated, somewhat gruff uncle, was a war hero, admired by many. He is adopted by a teacher. In summary it sounds very unlikely, yet the characters all worked together to make a community that I found believable. Okay, believable in a Christmas story way, but it was very moving. The love they shared. The fears of angering people and staying quiet that came in out repeated but appropriately quiet ways. The psychology felt true, but positive. I cried like a baby. Maybe I was played, but I enjoyed it.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Cindy.
29 reviews4 followers
January 22, 2009
This is a book for young and teenage readers, but I was completely moved by this book. It is amazing and I found myself teary-eyed more than once. The main character is great, but it's amazing how important the uncle is to the book even thought he is dead a the very beginning. Thumbs up!
Profile Image for Elizabeth R Kelly.
24 reviews
September 20, 2024
I didnt enjoy much. At some parts I didn't quite understand what was happening and the ending was definitely predictable. But not one of the worst books I've had to read for school. Overall I know some people like this book a lot but I sadly was not one of them.
Profile Image for Leila .
131 reviews2 followers
May 12, 2015
And Uncle Vernon's body is where?
Profile Image for Tylar.
4 reviews
February 23, 2016
The book was okay, there wasn't really a point to it though.
852 reviews8 followers
May 20, 2018
Gabe (a foster kid) moves in with his Uncle Vernon (3 years ago) then ends up finding his Uncle dead in their home that is located far off the beaten path. Gabe hides the death only to come home from school to a note in the mailbox that says "I know your secret. Don't be afraid." Uncle Vernon's body is gone. Gabe corresponds with the letter writer for several weeks, which result in Guppy a black lab being sent to him from Smitty- the mystery writer. Suspenseful and a page turner. - Flashbacks tell of Gabe and Vernon's life together.
School personnel- Mr. Baim, Mrs. Pickering- His BFF Webber, Miss Rodriguez- social worker all get involved in Gabe's life when Sheriff Hewitt eventually discovers Uncle Vernon's body in a local funeral home.
SPOILER- Smitty was an embalmer and was friends with Vernon in the Vietnam War. At the funeral in Arlington National Cemetary, many vets return and tell stories about Vernon. This is very heartwarming. Dramatic ending where Mr. Baim (who has adopted Gabe) and Gabe go to return Guppy to Smitty (who has a deformed face from trying to shoot himself-suffers from PTSD- and they have NEVER met face to face)- but Smitty sends Guppy back across the ravine of the river they met at.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Cass.
556 reviews
June 7, 2021
Gable Culligan Pace had been in the foster care system after his mother had died when Gabe was just two years old. When Gabe was in 4th grade, a diligent social worker found his mother's brother, and Gabe moved in with his Uncle Vernon. Gabe and his uncle get along very well with Vernon teaching Gabe living skills and giving him a secure and loving home. Vernon was a former Army man who had served three tours in Vietnam and lost a leg. For the first time in his life, Gabe was loved and had someone to love until first day of sixth grade when he came home to find Uncle Vernon dead on the floor. Gabe does not know what to do, and he is so afraid of having to return to the foster care system, that he doesn't do anything but just go to school the next day. When he gets home, his uncle's body is gone! Someone starts corresponding with Gabe by letters left in the mailbox.....

This is really a good book and by the end I was crying my heart out. Loved it!!
Profile Image for Pj.
341 reviews
June 29, 2017
. Twelve-year-old Gabe grew up in the foster care system until a social worker located his Uncle Vernon two years before. Uncle Vernon is a crusty old Viet Nam Veteran that no one in town really thinks much about. When Gabe comes home to discover that his uncle has died of a heart attack, he's terrifed of going back into foster care so pretends everything is normal and continues on as usual. Except someone does know. They remove his Uncle's body, gives him a dog as a companion, and leaves notes in the mailbox. Short notes, just a line or two, and no identification as to who they are. How long Gabe exists in this manner is a journey that requires lots of tissues. You can not read it without tears. SO GOOD
Profile Image for Pam.
9,804 reviews54 followers
April 7, 2019
Tender story of a young boy who lives with his uncle. He's been in foster care since his mom died when he was very young. The social worker found his uncle (a Vietnam Veteran) and the uncle adopted him.
The story opens with him discovering his uncle's death. He decides to go on with school and not tell anyone. However the next day, the body is gone. Someone leaves notes in the mailbox - hence the title - and gives him a dog so he's not alone. This vet was damaged by the war and doesn't cope well with people.
Eventually, the truth comes out and he has to learn to trust and move forward.
Language and content are written at a middle grade level. For mature middle grade students.
Profile Image for Amy Roebuck.
613 reviews8 followers
November 26, 2018
I would recommend this (purportedly) juvenile/Young people's fiction to any mature person who served--or who loves someone who served--in a military conflict. It is about a boy whose parents are not in his life, who, after rattling around in the foster care system, is taken to the home of his uncle, a Vietnam War veteran who has very little use for people. It is far more than the 'curmudgeon redeemed by cute kid' trope. Other characters' complexities make sure of that.

I read it in a few hours--it took more tissues than time.
Profile Image for Eileen Winfrey.
1,021 reviews8 followers
January 15, 2019
I’ll go ahead and add this story about a 6th trader who finds his adoptive uncle dead of a stroke to my pile of “read with Kleenex” books. What I love about children’s literature is that things usually end well, end though kids endure extreme trials along the way. Gabe, the protagonist in this book, survives this situation while not telling any other adults, via support from a mysterious letter writer. Once the death of his uncle is discovered, Gabe has to make choices about what comes next. Written with real insight into external behavior vs. internal struggle. I loved it.
Profile Image for Lea Ann.
473 reviews18 followers
June 8, 2017
Interesting story that revolves around a mystery man who takes care of a boy from afar after the boy's guardian uncle dies. Who is this man? What is his connection to Gabe's uncle? How long can Gabe keep up his lies and stay out of the foster care system? While finding the answers to some of these questions, Gabe finds out the truth about his uncle's past, and he learns that he is not as alone as he thinks he is. A thought-provoking story that references the Vietnam War.
Profile Image for Kayla Smith.
10 reviews
June 18, 2017
Have some tissues handy when reading this book. Be prepared, as I do not read children's books often, I expected this one to be cheesy and unappealing. However, I am 16 years old and I think everybody else would agree with me if I said that this is not just a book for children- it is one for teens and adults too. Do not bypass this book. Discovering this was one of the greatest accidents I have made.
218 reviews
March 4, 2020
Good story of a good boy whose uncle, a crusty, hard-drinking Vietnam vet, dies leaving the boy an orphan. Not knowing what to do, the boy doesn’t report his uncle’s death. He checks the mail every day, pays the bills, and continues to go to school. One day a letter for him appears. It basically says that the writer has his back, making the boy feel safe. How the boy fares as the days pass is the rest of the book. Good for boys especially but is a good read aloud book also for school or family.
Profile Image for Sydney.
7 reviews4 followers
February 26, 2021
I really enjoyed this book. I give this book 5 stars overall. This book was good and I liked how it tied in a little bit of history with the story. It was interesting to try and figure who was writing the letters and who was sending Gabe the things he needed. I recommend this book to those who want a short read and like mysteries with a little bit of history. Overall this book was really good and it made me want to keep reading to the next chapter, and I really thought the book was interesting.
Profile Image for Morgan Schultz.
8 reviews
June 30, 2017
I read this in the last few weeks of 6th grade. The description on the back of the book really interested me, however as i read the chapters one by one, it still had me wondering when the action was going to happen. In the second to last chapter ther was a slight plot twist, but that was really it. So, if you like action, I wouldn't recommend.
Profile Image for Lucas.
550 reviews17 followers
July 5, 2017
The book really got to me twice at the end, and it is rare for a book to move me like this one did.

I didn't give it five stars only because the first 100 pages or so seemed to drag on that I stopped and started several times.

Uncle Vernon was more of a character after he died than before and Gabe came into his own at the end.
102 reviews6 followers
March 23, 2020
A tender story about a young (6th grade) boy and his relationship with his unclec, a Vietnam war veteran. Well written and almost poetic. Sad story but with beautiful meaning. I don't think my own 11 year old boy would enjoy it, but I thought it was wonderful.

Garden City Public Library's "extreme book nerd 2020" category: a book by a first time author.
Profile Image for Rebecca Dauber.
107 reviews
October 26, 2021
I do not usually read YA novels but so glad I read this one. The story is heartfelt, and from growing up in a household with a Vietnam Vet as a parent, the character of Uncle Vernon is spot-on. I was so afraid of how this story would end that I was afraid to finish the book. Thank you Ms. Shafer for writing a brilliant and heartwarming story.
Profile Image for Kathy Lautenschlager.
270 reviews2 followers
December 26, 2016
A wonderfully written story! It caught my heart and I had to finish in one day. It's a young adult book and it's short, only 178 pages. I wish there was a sequel so I could find out how Gabe turn's out.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 313 reviews

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