The Yearling

Paperback, 474 pages

English language

Published Feb. 7, 2002 by Scribner Paperback Fiction.

ISBN:
978-0-7432-2525-0
Copied ISBN!
OCLC Number:
49738162

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RELIVE THE WONDER OF A CHILDHOOD FAVORITE THAT HAS BEEN CAPTURING THE HEARTS OF READERS FOR MORE THAN HALF A CENTURY.

An instant bestseller when it was released in 1938, this Pulitzer Prize winner has been read and loved by school-age children across the nation for more than fifty years. In this classic story of the Baxter family and their wild, hard, and satisfying life in remote central Florida, Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings has written one of the great novels of our times. A rich and varied tale -- tender in its understanding of boyhood, crowded with the excitement of the backwoods hunt, with vivid descriptions of the primitive, beautiful hammock country, written with humor and earthy philosophy -- The Yearling is a novel for readers of all ages. Its glowing picture of a life refreshingly removed from modern patterns of living is universal in its revelation of simple courageous …

35 editions

Review of 'The Yearling' on 'Goodreads'

I've read this book a number of times but my favorite is when my son and I read it out loud together. It was great fun doing the backwoods, "hillbilly" accent and using old-timey terms like varmints and vittles and rations. When we got to the very end of the book I could no longer read and my son had to take over because I was so choked up and emotional. This is a great book for anyone who has had a beloved pet or who has a beloved child. Life can break your heart you better believe it. But it's beautiful nonetheless.

Review of 'The Yearling' on 'Goodreads'

What ages would I recommend it too? – Twelve and up.

Length? – Several days read.

Characters? – Memorable, several characters.

Setting? – Florida early 1900's?

Written approximately? – 1938.

Does the story leave questions in the readers mind? – Yes. There were a few inconsistencies.

Any issues the author (or a more recent publisher) should cover? Yes. As people move further from the time this novel is written about, several words don't make sense, and many children readers today would not understand how he could not have to go to school, or a few of the other unique things in this story.

Notes for the reader: It was really odd, reading a story in which both males are called by female names. Penny and Jody as male, just pulls you right out of the story. And the one main female was a bit cardboard, hardly developed at all. She …

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Subjects

  • Classic fiction
  • Modern fiction
  • Rawlings, Marjorie Kinnan, 1896-1953
  • Literature - Classics / Criticism
  • Fiction
  • Classics
  • Fiction / General
  • Deer
  • Juvenile fiction
  • Parent and child

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