Friday, February 12, 2016

FFB: Chancy and the Grand Rascal -- Sid Fleischman

Image result for Chancy and the Grand Rascal -- Sid FleischmanLong ago I picked up A. S. Fleischman's Gold Medal novels.  I enjoyed the ones I read, but I didn't put Fleischman in the top rank of Gold Medal writers.  About 20 years ago, I discovered that he'd reinvented himself as an author of children's books and gone on to win just about every award available.  I picked up one of the books and immediately became a fan.  The other day I ran across one I hadn't read, Chancy and the Grand Rascal.  Naturally I snapped it up.

Teenaged Chancy, whose father died in the Civil War and whose mother died soon afterward, was separated from his younger brother and sister.  He's fond of the family that took him in, but now he's off to find his siblings, pushing a wheelbarrow loaded with food and his meager possessions.  Along the way, as is the usual thing in stories like this, he'll encounter adventures and rascals, but there are some good folks too.  One of the latter is his uncle, the Grand Rascal, Will Buckthorn, who claims that he "can out-laugh, out-exaggerate and out-rascal any man this side of the Big Muddy, and twice as many on the other!"  He can, too, and he has other talents and abilities, including being able to bend a rifle barrel over his knee.

Some adventures occur on land, some on an island, some on a steamboat, and some on a raft.  They're all fun and funny, as Fleischman gives a real tall-tale flavor to everything.  And in a Fleischman novel, you can count on all the plot threads coming together neatly before the end.  I get a big kick out of his books, and if I run across another one I haven't read, I'll grab that one, too.

5 comments:

Deb said...

Perhaps it's just the raft and the picaresque storyline, but your plot synopsis reminds me of Huck Finn.

George said...

A. S. Fleischman was one of my favorite Gold Medal writers, too. No in the top rank, but A. S. Fleischman always delivered a solid story. I had no idea he branched out to children's books. I'll have to track a couple down and see if I like them. Your review suggests I would.

mybillcrider said...

Deb, there's definitely a lot of Twain influence in this one.

George, you'll get a kick out of any of Fleischman's kid's books. They're very funny and well written.

Todd Mason said...

'Sid and Paul Fleischman are the only parent and child who have both won the Newbery Medal, the venerable American Library Association award that annually recognizes the "most distinguished contribution to American literature for children".'

Impressive.

Mathew Paust said...

I had the same reaction as Deb. That Twain milieu and voice.