About Books Movies Discussion Support Support Support
 
MuggleNet | The Book Trolley - Adam of the Road - Reviewed By Robbie Fischer.


Adam of the Road
by Elizabeth Janet Gray


The 1943 winner of the Newbery Medal is still available with its magnificent illustrations by Robert Lawson. It may recall to mind a more recent Newbery Medal winner, as it recounts an adventure of an eleven-year-old minstrel boy in 13th-century England.

Adam Quartermayne is the son of Roger, who, as minstrels go, is on the high-class end. There is nothing Adam loves more than walking around the country, singing and playing his harp and telling stories with his father. So he is impatient to get going after spending an unexpectedly long time in the school at St. Alban's abbey, though he has a good friend named Perkin and a beloved dog named Nick to keep him company.

Finally Roger arrives, revealing that he is now in the service of one Sir Edmund. Adam's big adventure begins when he joins his father, and many other minstrels, at the wedding celebration for Sir Edmund's daughter. One of the other minstrels is a scoundrel named Jankin, who takes a liking to Adam's beloved spaniel Nick. By one way and another, at the earliest opportunity Jankin makes off with Nick, leaving Adam heartbroken yet determined to get his dog back.

Roger and Adam set off together to catch Jankin up and get Nick back, but they are soon separated and it proves even harder to find each other than to find the dog. Nevertheless Adam swims a river, triumphs over a band of robbers, breaks his head open, gets chased by the watch, and walks barefoot through miles of snow before he finds Nick. Then he faces even more difficulties (as well as a good deal of hard labor) before he is reunited with his best friend, his father, and the minstrel life that he loves.

In one boy's travels between June and April, this story delivers a rich and varied picture of life in medieval England, from its seedy inns to its gracious courts, from pious church people to the crude and crooked, from bustling fairs to desolate roads, from cloistered academies to the plowman's team. Every season, and many picturesque settings, passes into view at an interesting and, indeed, pivotal period of English history. Yet at the same time, the book warmly and faithfully focuses on the warm heart and fierce devotion of its charming, determined young hero.

I think this book richly deserves its Medal. And I think it will demand to be re-read from time to time.

Robbie Fischer
Arizona USA

Recommended Age: 10+

If you would like to contact Robbie, you may do so here.


 
Most Commented
Big
News
Top Commentors
Loading...
Which stars next film are you looking most forward to?

 

Woman in Black - Dan
Perks of Being a Wallfower - Emma
Into the White

 

January 2, 2008 - MuggleNet gets hacked by, in Emerson's words, a group of "sexually frustrated men". The site came back online three days later.
 
 

Please login to participate in MuggleNet's Daily Trivia Competition!

That'll change the world, that report will. Front page of the Daily Prophet, I expect, cauldron leaks.

Ron Weasley
Goblet of Fire, Chapter 5, Page 56
J.K. Rowling once thought of writing the Death Eaters as the Knights of Walpurgis.
 
 

BAFTA & Grammy Awards
February 12

MegaCon with Tom Felton
February 17-19

Academy Awards
February 26

Studio Tour
March 31, 2012

Username :
Password :
 Sign Up
 Forgot Password ?
 
 
 
Happy Holidays 2011   Pottermore: Slytherin   Pottermore: Hufflepuff   Pottermore: Ravenclaw  
Pottermore: Gryffindor   Quidditch World Cup   Halloween 2011   DHnagini  
DHelderwand   DH2cast   DH1Trio   DH Voldemort  
DH_Trio   Deathly Hallows - Hermione   Burning Hogwarts   Wizarding World  
Draco   Half-Blood Prince Trio   Harry   Hermione  
LEGO Harry Potter  
 
 
Change Background
 
  Twitter   Facebook   RSS   Tumblr