When the first mate of the freight boat Neptune falls ill, it is up to Abigail, the captain's daughter, to steer the ship up the Hudson River from New Jersey to New York City - (Baker & Taylor)
When the first mate of the freight boat Neptune falls ill, it is up to Abigail, the captain's daughter, to steer the ship up the Hudson River from New Jersey to New York City. - (Baker & Taylor)
Booklist Reviews
%% This is a multi-book review. SEE the title "True Heart" for next imprint and review text. %% ((Reviewed April 1, 1999)) Copyright 2000 Booklist Reviews
Horn Book Magazine Reviews
The day this story takes place-sometime in the late nineteenth century-begins ordinarily enough: Tom and Abigail Bates watch vegetables being loaded onto the freight boat Neptune. Their father, Captain Bates, transports the vegetables from New Jersey to New York City, where Abigail and Tom disembark for school. They are barely out of the harbor when a string of action-packed circumstances finds Abigail not only at the wheel of the Neptune (which she has steered with her father often) but towing a large, disabled sailing ship up the Hudson River to Pier Forty-two. Avi discloses (in an appended author's note) that he based this voyage on a story which appeared in an 1881 copy of St. Nicholas magazine where it was "presented as neither fiction nor nonfiction, simply as an account of something heroic that happened." As in his debut I Can Read book, Finding Providence (rev. 5/97), Avi's generous dose of adventure and suspense, combined with his straightforward yet compelling story-telling style, custom-fit this revived tale for new chapter-book readers. Don Bolognese creates a turn-of-the-century nautical atmosphere with subdued watercolors that never overwhelm the text. marilyn bousquin Copyright 1999 Horn Book Magazine Reviews
Kirkus Reviews
In the I Can Read Chapter Book series, Avi returns to some surefire ingredients a girl and the boat she eventually pilots though for a far younger audience than that for The True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle. Every day, Abigail Bates, brother Tom, and their father, Captain Bates, leave Old Port, in New Jersey, in their paddle wheel freight boat and home, the Neptune. On board is a load of fresh vegetables intended for buyers in New York City, 20 miles up the Hudson. One morning, as they leave Old Port, two sailing ships collide; Captain Bates offers to tow one of them to New York, but under harbor law, he has to take her wheel. He leaves first mate Mr. Oliver to pilot the Neptune, but Mr. Oliver becomes ill and hands the wheel over to Abigail. Scared but game, Abigail navigates the two ships through the busy river traffic, barely escaping another collision and ingeniously maneuvering the stricken sailing ship to safe berth. Predictably, for her courage and skill, she is made an honorary captain. Abigail is a spunky heroine cast in a sturdy story; the suspense will hold readers just ready for chapter books. The surprise in the competent illustrations, which conjure the late 19th-century setting, is the insertion of some unexpected diversity in the casting of the first mate. (Fiction. 8-10) Copyright 1999 Kirkus Reviews
School Library Journal Reviews
Gr 2-3-An easy-reader set in the 1880s. Abigail and Tom have made the 20-mile trip from Old Port, NJ, to New York City on their family's freight boat hundreds of times. Things take a surprising turn, though, when their father takes the helm of a damaged sailing ship they are towing into harbor and Abigail must take charge of the Neptune when the first mate falls ill. She navigates the freighter safely through to its final destination where she is lauded by the crews of both vessels. An author's note states that the tale is based on a story that appeared in St. Nicholas magazine in 1881. The setting is established largely through the illustrations, from the characters' suspenders, aprons, and lace-up boots to the engine being stoked. Muted colors and a predominance of earth tones add to the atmosphere. Although the dialogue and third-person narrative have no particular period flavor, the boat signals and maneuvers are vividly described. The child-saves-the-day story line will appeal to youngsters whose daydreams tend to feature themselves as the heroic protagonists. With minimal characterization, this is a carefully illustrated, plot-driven adventure for transitional readers.-Faith Brautigam, Gail Borden Public Library, Elgin, IL Copyright 1999 School Library Journal Reviews