Will Hobbs Can Write A Great Book; Canoe?
The blurbs and descriptions for this book certainly make it sound like it has everything you might want for a ripping adventure tale. But, and I don't mean to be a wiseguy, I've read lots of blurbs and descriptions for books that didn't deliver. Imagine my delight, then, to report that, at least for me, this book is better than expected across the board, and in every way that matters.
The hero, Young Mac, is resourceful, steadfast, observant, dependable and adventurous. He is everything you could hope for in a boy hero. His Mom and Dad are supportive, loving, reliable, competent and unflappable. Young Mac's Makah fisherman friend, Lighthouse George, is quiet, skilled, dignified, and wood and ocean crafty. And every one of the good guys has a sense of humor and an understated charm.
The tale's setting is romantic and realistic. From the lighthouse to the woods to the ocean coast you can smell and feel the salt spray and the spruce. This is one of the best located, one of the best placed, boy's own adventures I've ever read. Set in the 1870's it would put many adult historical novels to shame. There is a lot of background about the indigenous Makahs that is worked unobtrusively into the story, which gives the book a bit of cultural heft. There's also a lot of fishing.
The mystery adventure has ghost canoes, a shipwreck, a murder, treasure, a shadowy hidden figure, fog, foul weather, towering cliffs and pinnacles, howling storms, and a skeleton. The mystery is just the right amount of twisty. The action can be riveting and the fog bound lurking and exploring is suspenseful, (and damp). This is legitimate "Treasure Island" territory. And there's a lot of fishing.
So, O.K., am I hamming it up a bit? Sure. But this really did strike me as a crisply written, fast paced, nicely structured, and generously well imagined ripping adventure. The history of the Pacific Northwest, the dignity of the native people, the bonds of friendship, and the rich and colorful romance of the wilderness are all presented in clear unadorned prose, and with warm feeling. This isn't a by the numbers book and it isn't constructed along the lines of some tired formula. This had style and depth for a young adventure reader to really sink his or her teeth into. As promised, a ripping yarn.