Part survival story , part exploration of racial justice in America, part journey of self-discovery, and wholly engaging and memorable.
After a freak storm, he finds himself at the m.
How did that happen? Did the trucker who just gave him a ride somehow whisk him back fifty years in time? The woods aren\'t for Richie the haven they used to be.
Suddenly it\'s not summer, but late fall.
Richie just wants to escape, so he seeks refuge in the deep Missouri woods he loves so much.
Now that she\'s Richie\'s guardian, she makes his life miserable.
Aunt Trudy never wanted kids.
Richie grabs your attention and doesn\'t let go until the very end.-Elsie G, age 13.
It was a good history lesson without being offensive to anyone.-LaShaunda Hoffman, sensitivity reader and author Searching for a new favorite book? Look no further than The Long Shadow by Phyllis Wheeler .
I like the friendship that blossomed in the story and how the story came full circle in the end. --Jerram Barrs, professor at Covenant Theological Seminary and author of Echoes of Eden: Reflections on Christianity, Literature, and the Arts I\'ve read this book and enjoyed the characters in the story.
I gladly recommend it to anyone.
It is a delightful story, as well as a very painful one, told very well without a wasted word.
I could not stop reading it once I had begun.
Louis I loved this book.
It is certainly stuck in my head.-Joe Corbett, school librarian, St.
A well done and powerful story.
Part survival story , part exploration of racial justice in America, part journey of self-discovery, and wholly engaging and memorable