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When Kit Hathaway makes a mistake, she doesn't fool around.
Upset about losing the lead in the school play and problems with her obnoxious stepfather, Kit impulsively steals a gold bracelet from a fancy department store. And promptly gets caught.
Suddenly her whole life changes. Kit is sure she's blown her chance at a scholarship, and even her relationship with her best friend is strained. Ironically, the only good thing is her sentence: 20 hours of volunteer work at the humane society. Kit feels just like those animals...caged in. But with the help of a special new friend, Kit comes to a startling realization: the key to her cage is right in her own hand.
After losing an acting role and fighting with her alcoholic stepfather, Kit is arrested for shoplifting and ordered to work, as part of her sentence, at an animal shelter.
Kit fingers the gold bracelet while she watches Marcia get her father to buy a necklace. Marcia also got the part in the school play that Kit wanted. Why shouldn't she have the bracelet? Her drunken stepfather would never buy her one and besides, all the kids shoplift. But, Kit gets caught. She's ashamed of what she did and almost loses her best friend because she must hide the truth. The night she must go to court, she misses her friend's unique birthday party, complete with a hot air balloon ride, but she can't tell her the real reason she won't be there. Her punishment is twenty hours of community service helping at the Humane Society. Feeling she is trapped in a cage and unable to get out, she readily identifies with the animals. By confronting her mistake and admitting to her classmates what she did and the consequences, she is finally able to unlock her own cage. Kit is a likeable character with whom it is easy to identify. Adolescents in similar situations may think twice about their actions. 2001 (orig. 1991), Puffin Books, $4.99 and $2.50. Ages 10 to 13. Reviewer:Janet L. Rose
More Reviews and RecommendationsPEG KEHRET's popular novels for young people are regularly nominated for state awards. She has received the Young Hoosier Award, the Golden Sower Award, the Iowa Children's Choice Award, the Celebrate Literacy Award, the Sequoyah Award, the Land of Enchantment Award, the Maud Hart Lovelace Award, and the Pacific Northwest Young Reader's Choice Award. She lives with her husband, Carl, and their animal friends in Washington State, where she is a volunteer at the Humane Society and SPCA. Her two grown children and four grandchildren live in Washington, too.
Peg's Minstrel titles include Nightmare Mountain: Sisters, Long Ago; Cages; Terror at the Zoo; Horror at the Haunted House; and the Frightmares series.
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August 22, 2008: I think that this is one of the best books that Peg Kehret has written. I'm an animal lover, and if you are too, then you should read this book!
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November 26, 2007: I read this book when I was in 7th grade for a project just because the other kids took the good ones and I just fell in love with it. I couldn't put it down and could so relate to Kit. Most kid do go through hardships in their lives and they just want to be heard out for once. In this book, the main character vented her anger and frustration out by shoplifting because no one could hear her out. She flet lonely and a criminal until she goes to her 20 hour community service at the local humane society and bonds with the animals. You'll laugh, you'll cry, you'll be inspired to find your voice in no time. This book saved me from myself and it helped me find my voice to say to my school, 'Hey y'all, I'm still here.' So if you feel lonely and such, read this book, trust me, you won't ever regret it ever in your lifetime. I'm now a junior in highschool and Kit's story still inspires me today----to never give up on anything you believe in.