Echo Mountain

کوه اکو
افزودن به بوکمارک اشتراک گذاری 0 دیدگاه کاربران 4 (1)

مشارکت: عنوان و توضیح کوتاه هر کتاب را ترجمه کنید این ترجمه بعد از تایید با نام شما در سایت نمایش داده خواهد شد.
iran گزارش تخلف

فرمت کتاب

ebook

تاریخ انتشار

2020

Lexile Score

690

Reading Level

3

ATOS

4.3

Interest Level

4-8(MG)

نویسنده

Lauren Wolk

شابک

9780525555575
  • اطلاعات
  • نقد و بررسی
  • دیدگاه کاربران
★ «در بهترین داستان تاریخی. ” کتاب شاخ «تا به حال در مورد التیام، هم در مورد بدن و هم در مورد دل، زمان بهتری برای خواندن نبوده است. ” نیویورک تایمز کتاب نقد و بررسی کوه اکو بهترین کتاب تحسین شده ۲۰۲۰ است! بهترین کتاب سال برای NPR · کتاب Fanfare Selection · کتاب Kirkus بهترین کتاب سال · یک مجله هفتگی ناشران بهترین کتاب سال · کتاب بهترین کتاب کتابخانه مدرسه ای در شیکاگو · بهترین کتاب سال بعد از از از دست دادن تقریبا همه چیز در رکود بزرگ، خانواده الی مجبور به ترک خانه خود را در شهر و شروع به از دست دادن در بیابان بی رام کوهستان نزدیک. الی در زندگی جدیدش در کوهستان، ازادی و عشق به دنیای طبیعی را پیدا کرده است. اما بعد از یک تصادف وحشتناک که باعث شد پدرش در کما به سر برد، شادی کمی وجود دارد. یه حادثه‌ای که به طور غیرمنصفانه ای به الی نسبت داده شده الی دختری است که امور را به دست خود می‌گیرد و تصمیم می‌گیرد به پدرش کمک کند تا به بالای کوه برود و در جستجوی رازهای شفابخش زنی باشد که فقط با عنوان «عجوزه» شناخته می‌شود. ” اما عفریته و کوه هنوز داستان‌های ناگفته بسیاری دارند که فاش نشده‌اند. داستان تاریخی در بهترین داستان، کوه اکو جشن پیدا کردن راه خود را و تبدیل شدن به حقیقی ترین خود است. لورن ولک، جایزه افتخاری نیوبری و جایزه اسکات اودل نویسنده برنده ولف هالو و ان طرف دریای درخشان، داستان شگفت‌انگیزی از انعطاف‌پذیری، پافشاری و دوستی را در سه نسل از خانواده‌ها می‌سراید. نوشته‌های ارامش‌بخش و اموزنده. ” می‌گوید: «این کتابی است که خوانندگان را مانند مرهمی تسکین می‌دهد. ” وال استریت ژورنال: ” لیندا مولالی هانت، نویسنده پرفروش ماهی در یک درخت

نقد و بررسی

Kirkus

February 1, 2020
After losing almost everything in the Great Depression, Ellie's family moves to the Maine woods on Echo Mountain to start a farm--then tragedy strikes. Not long after getting them established in their new life, Ellie's father is struck on the head by a falling tree and lapses into a monthslong coma, his recovery unlikely. Never feeling threatened by the wilderness the way her mother and older sister, Esther, do, Ellie takes over many of her beloved father's chores, finding comfort and confidence in the forest. She's fully mindful of her place in the natural world and her impact on the plants and animals she shares it with. After she becomes determined to use the resources of the woods, however novel and imaginative the application, to save her father, conflict with her mother and Esther increases sharply. Led by a dog, Ellie discovers elderly Cate--called "hag" and shunned as a witch--badly injured, living alone in a cabin on the mountaintop. Cate fully understands the 12-year-old's slightly supernatural sense. Cate's grandson, Larkin, Ellie's age, flits in and out of the tale before finally claiming his place in this magnificently related story of the wide arc of responsibility, acceptance, and, ultimately, connectedness. Carefully paced and told in lyrical prose, characters--all default white--are given plenty of time and room to develop against a well-realized, timeless setting. A luscious, shivery delight. (Historical fiction. 10-14)

COPYRIGHT(2020) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.



Publisher's Weekly

Starred review from March 2, 2020
A girl realizes her standout gifts as a healer in this exquisitely layered historical novel set in Depression-era Maine. After the financial crash forces a tight-knit family of five to move from town to build a cabin on Echo Mountain, a tree-felling accident puts 12-year-old narrator Ellie’s father into a coma. The family’s struggle to survive intensifies, made worse by fears about whether their beloved father—a tailor turned woodsman who, like Ellie, loves the wild—will ever awaken. Complex family dynamics loom large amid day-to-day matters: Ellie’s mother and sister long for their former life and blame Ellie for her father’s state; Ellie, who discovers a gift for healing, further upsets them by trying to startle her father awake. When a dog leads Ellie to “the hag,” a woman who knows about cures and is herself suffering, the girl lends a hand, resulting in further
tensions, this time within the interconnected mountain
community.
Via strongly sketched cabin-life cadences and memorable, empathic characterizations—including, perhaps most vividly, of the wilderness itself—Newbery Honoree Wolk (Wolf Hollow) builds a powerful, well-paced portrait of interconnectedness, work and learning, and strength in a time of crisis. Ages 10–up.



School Library Journal

April 1, 2020

Gr 4 Up-The Great Depression took many things from Ellie's family-her parent's jobs, their house, and their comfortable lives. They moved to property on Echo Mountain to start over and rebuild. And what the Great Depression didn't take, the mountain did. Ellie lost the family that she once knew. Her mother and her sister, Esther, weren't meant for life on the mountains, they said. And her father has spent the last several months in a coma due to an accident from a felled tree. Ellie carries the emotional burden of taking the blame for it and the physical burden of handling the manual tasks in his absence. But while the mountain takes, it also gives-carved trinkets, plants for healing, and friendships found in unexpected places. Wolk crafts an uplifting story of resilience and determination during a time when morale is incredibly low. She illustrates how people are multifaceted, and not always what they seem. In this novel, family can take many forms-the one you're born into, and the one that finds you when and where you least expect it. The narrative does contain subtle but direct details involving maggots, blood, and wounds that will intrigue the most reluctant of readers but may be too much for those with a weak stomach. VERDICT A heartfelt read and recommended first purchase for all collections. You can tell readers that the dog doesn't die at the end.-Alicia Kalan, The Northwest School, Seattle

Copyright 2020 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.



Booklist

Starred review from March 1, 2020
Grades 4-8 *Starred Review* It is a magical thing to step into a world created by Wolk (Beyond the Bright Sea, 2017), even without any fantastic enchantment. In this instance, the story of Ellie and her family is a diamond glinting in the rough of the Great Depression, when poverty drives them from town to a more wild existence on a mountainside. Though her mother and older sister yearn to return to civilized life, Ellie thrives in this new environment. But they all must muster different brands of courage when an accident leaves Ellie's father in a coma. Though only 12, Ellie steps up to do many of the tasks, such as hunting and fishing, that had been her father's, all the while remaining determined to jar him back awake by any means possible. Her spirit and empathy eventually lead her far up the mountain to the cabin of Cate, aka the local hag, where Ellie discovers that Cate is herself ill with a festering wound. Compelled to help Cate as much as her father, Ellie learns and accomplishes more than she knew was possible. Complex and fiercely loving, Ellie is a girl any reader would be proud to have as a friend. Woven with music, puppies, and healing, Wolk's beautiful storytelling turns this historical tale of family and survival into a captivating saga.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2020, American Library Association.)




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