Whittington

· Sold by Random House Books for Young Readers
4.0
21 reviews
Ebook
208
Pages
Eligible

About this ebook

The power of reading is beautifully captured in this 2006 Newbery Honor-winning book.
Bernie keeps a barn full of animals the rest of the world has no use for–two retired trotters, a rooster, some banty hens, and a Muscovy duck with clipped wings who calls herself The Lady. When the cat called Whittington shows up one day, it is to the Lady that he makes an appeal to secure a place in the barn. The Lady’s a little hesitant at first, but when the cat claims to be a master ratter, that clinches it.
Bernie’ s orphaned grandkids, Abby and Ben, come to the barn every day to help feed the animals. Abby shares her worry that Ben can’t really read yet and that he refuses to go to Special Ed. Whittington and the Lady decide that Abby should give Ben reading lessons in the barn. It is a balm for Ben when, having toughed out the daily lesson, Whittington comes to tell, in tantalizing installments, the story handed down to him from his nameless forebearer, Dick Whittington’s cat–the legend of the lad born into poverty in rural England during the Black Death, who runs away to London to seek his fortune. This is an unforgettable tale about how learning to read saves one little boy. It is about the healing, transcendent power of storytelling and how, if you have loved ones surrounding you and good stories to tell, to listen to, and to read, you have just about everything of value in this world.

Ratings and reviews

4.0
21 reviews
A Google user
May 11, 2010
This book was so adorable! I would definatly read this book agin, and again, and again! Kuddos to you, Alan Armstrong! Well done! This book touched me deeply.
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Nicole Stoiber
May 27, 2020
The best book I've read in years. Clever and heart felt. This should be a mandatory read to all school kids or a bed time story to pass on .
1 person found this review helpful
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Ash Sunshine
February 14, 2015
This book is great. I haven't finished it yet. But I love it! Also, I think Whittington and the Lady might be in love.
5 people found this review helpful
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About the author

Alan Armstrong started volunteering in a friend’s bookshop when he was eight. At 14, he was selling books at Brentano’s. As an adult, every so often, he takes to the road in a VW bus named Zora to peddle used books. He is the editor of Forget Not Mee & My Garden, a collection of the letters of Peter Collinson, the 18th-century mercer and amateur botanist. He lives with his wife, Martha, a painter, in Massachusetts.

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