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How do you rescue a wild coyote trapped in an elevator in a downtown Seattle office building? How do you save an injured baby seal at the bottom of a cliff with the tide coming in? Fourteen-year-old Shannon Young, visiting from New Jersey, is about to find out.
Shannon's parents, both doctors, are working in refugee camps overseas while she and her little brother, Cody, are spending the summer in Seattle with their mysterious uncle Neal. To their surprise, Uncle Neal drives an ambulance for Jackie's Wild Seattle, an animal rescue center. Shannon and Cody join their uncle and his partner, a border collie, for nine weeks of breathless, sometimes reckless, often hilarious adventure chasing after whatever wild critters need help. When Uncle Neal is injured by a red-tailed hawk, Shannnon summons her courage and becomes the one who rescues the animals.
Jackie, who runs the center, believes in the "circle of healing," and in Shannon's circle everyone is in need of healing. Traumatized by the events of September 11, Cody is sure disaster is about to strike. Shannon wants to believe in Tyler, a teenage working off his court-appointed time at the wildlife center, but Uncle Neal thinks he's a ticking time bomb. Meanwhile, Neal is keeping secrets of his own.
Beneath the excitement, there's always an undertow of danger. Everything is uncertain, and home is so very far away.
Fourteen-year-old Shannon and her little brother, Cody, spend the summer with their uncle, helping at a wildlife rescue center named Jackie's Wild Seattle.
Girls finally get a Will Hobbs' adventure story of their own in this contemporary novel. Fourteen-year-old Shannon and her little brother, Cody, move to Seattle to live with their Uncle Neal for the summer. Neal works as a full-time volunteer for Jackie's Wild Seattle, an organization that rescues and rehabilitates wild animals found in urban areas. Shannon isn't at all happy to be away from Connecticut at first, but after making the rescue rounds with her uncle, she soon becomes his valuable assistant. Shannon goes on some daring missions, including a rock climbing trip down a cliff to rescue a seal and into the federal courthouse elevator to save a frightened coyote. Romance enters the plot, too, when Shannon befriends Tyler, a would-be juvenile delinquent doing community service at Jackie's animal shelter. Meanwhile, Shannon's and Cody's physician-parents are in Pakistan with Doctors without Borders, Uncle Neal is trying to hide his cancer from his family, and Cody suffers recurring nightmares, taking him back to witnessing the attack on the World Trade Center on September 11. Although the dialogue seems stilted and unnatural, the action-packed plot will keep readers going. Younger boy readers will enjoy it, too, as they identify with Cody. This novel is rich for discussion in class or a book group. Issues include how humans and animals can co-exist, what it means to give someone (animal or human) a second chance, and what it means to have courage. 2003, HarperCollins,
More Reviews and RecommendationsWill Hobbs is the award-winning author of more than fifteen novels for young readers, including Jason's Gold, Wild Man Island, Jackie's Wild Seattle, and Leaving Protection. Seven of his books have been chosen by the American Library Association as Best Books for Young Adults. A graduate of Stanford University, Will lives in Durango, Colorado, with his wife, Jean. They are frequent visitors to southern Arizona's deserts and mountains. crossing the wire combines the author's on-the-ground experience with extensive research into the hardships facing immigrants attempting to cross illegally into the U.S. through these forbidding landscapes.
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October 24, 2007: I would recommend the book Jackie?s Wild Seattle by Will Hobbs. The setting takes place in Seattle, Washington. This book would fall under the realistic fiction category. Jackie's wild Seattle has a total of 197 pages, and is an easy read. The main characters are Shannon a 14-year-old girl, Cody Shannon?s younger brother, Neal Shannon and Cody?s uncle, Jackie the owner of an emergency animal hospital and Tyler a boy who has to serve community service for breaking a dog?s back and then drowning it. While Shannon and Cody are in Seattle with their uncle they haven?t seen in a while, Shannon and Cody?s parents are in Afghanistan as doctors for the war refugees. Their uncle goes to rescue animals every morning very early. When Cody and Shannon go with him to rescue an eagle stuck in a net, Neal gets cut by an eagle talon on his thumb. He can?t work for a while, because his thumb is holding on only by a bit. So Shannon and Cody have to step in, and help Jackie. Later Shannon finds out that Uncle Neal has cancer, that someone could make it through or they could die from. Is he going to be alright she asks to her self? One of my favorite scenes is toward the end when Shannon and Cody are back home and exchanging E-mails with the hospital. Shannon and Cody tell how everything is at home and ask if they can ever come back to the animal hospital. They also ask if they will ever see the Wild Seattle Committee again, If so, when? I like this part because it shows that the hospital still cares about Shannon and Cody and not just blow them off after they leave to the other side of the country. The reason I would recommend this is because It?s not like all the other animal books where a person just take care of an animal and the story is over. This book actually tells about the characters and how they feel about the animals and what?s going on in their life. Overall this is a great book, and totally worth reading!
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October 04, 2005: A heart-breaking tale about wildlife. I personally loved it!