Dog driven

Terry Lynn Johnson

Book - 2019

McKenna, fourteen, is losing her vision to Stargardt's disease, but that will not stop her from competing in a rigorous new sled dog race through the Canadian wilderness.--

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Review by Booklist Review

Fourteen-year-old McKenna is about to embark on a dangerous mission to deliver a letter from her younger sister, Emma, to the Foundation for Fighting Blindness. Why dangerous? Because McKenna has entered a dog sled race that follows the Great Superior Mail Run the trail used by nineteenth century mail runners that extends north through Ontario, taking its travelers along and on frozen Lake Superior and over treacherous mountain terrain. McKenna's parents don't know she, like Emma, has the genetic retinal disease Stargardt and her vision is failing. On her first day out, she befriends another teen, Guy, who's become the eyes for his blind lead dog, and the pair supports one another along the three-day race. In a strong voice, McKenna describes her harrowing adventures on the trail, showing her fear but also her strength and determination. Readers will feel the cutting, icy wind and the obstacles on the trail, and they'll hold their breath as they wait to see if McKenna stays safe. Like Gary Paulsen's Winterdance (1994), Johnson shows the deep bonds and trust between musher and dogs, while also shedding light on a little-known genetic eye disorder. Johnson's personal experience of living in Ontario with her own team of Alaskan huskies shines through this book, which bracingly captures the excitement and trepidation of McKenna's adventure.--J. B. Petty Copyright 2019 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by School Library Journal Review

Gr 5--8--Fourteen-year-old McKenna's sister, Emma, wants to race their sled dogs, but she's lost most of her vision due to Stargardt disease, so she asks McKenna to race in her stead. But McKenna agrees reluctantly--she has the disease, too, and her vision is slowly deteriorating. Still, she wants to deliver a letter to the Foundation for Fighting Blindness. The race begins with McKenna in the lead. She befriends a boy named Guy, and the two take shelter in a cave during a wind storm, wondering how they will finish the race. Guy and McKenna are well developed, and the action is captivating. The plot becomes sluggish at points; a shorter narrative might have been more powerful. Each chapter ends with fictionalized historical letters between figures based on the era of dogsled mail couriers from 1856 to the early 1900s, as well as letters between the contemporary characters. These parallel exchanges tie the chapters together well. VERDICT Recommended for libraries where hybrid contemporary and historical fiction is high in demand.--Jill Baetiong, Bloomingdale Public Library, IL

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

A teen enters a challenging, multiday dog sled race to raise awareness of the incurable disease that's blinded her sister and now claims her own sight.To retain her independence, McKenna, 14, has hidden her deteriorating vision from her family, dropped extracurricular activities, and withdrawn from friends. Only 8-year-old Emma knows that McKenna, too, inherited Stargardt disease, a juvenile form of macular degeneration. (Both retain some peripheral vision.) Observing how parental conflicts, exacerbated by their mother's overprotectiveness, have undermined Emma's progress toward self-reliance, McKenna's avoided disclosing her disability. She's certain the knowledge would devastate her parents, but hiding vision loss is a risky strategyespecially on demanding, unfamiliar terrain, the route Canadian couriers once used to deliver mail by dog sled. An experienced musherher (presumed white) Michigan family raises and trains sled dogsMcKenna hopes her skills can compensate. As the weather deteriorates, sighted competitors (the daughter of a famous musher and the descendent of a dog sled courier) also make dangerous mistakes. McKenna's dread of losing her autonomy while her teen peers move toward independent adulthood resonates. Giving and accepting help, she confronts her own beliefs and fears about disability. Johnson's mushing expertise pays off in a suspenseful plot laden with convincing details. The lively, crowded, chaotic world of dogs and mushers is memorably complemented by the silent, icy wilderness they race through.A densely plotted, fast-moving, thematically rich tale set at the intersection of ability and disability. (author's note) (Adventure. 10-14) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Chapter 1 Whoever's behind me is coming fast.       I peek over my shoulder and see a blurry line of shapes bearing down. Mustard glances back too, then faces forward and digs in. He's so cocky. He hates getting passed.       An unspoken message travels through the whole team and they surge forward together. I love how the speed comes up through my feet. Cold air darts through cracks in my neck warmer. I squint into the wind.       "Gee over, Mustard. Don't be rude. Attagirl, Twix."       I have an eight-dog team, so my front-runners are at the edge of my visual range. All I can see of my leaders are furry shapes. It's as though my sunglasses are coated in Vaseline. The bright sun compounds the issue. When it reflects off the snow, it hurts my eyes, even with my dark shades.       The sound of synchronized panting grows louder behind me.       "Trail!" a boy's voice calls.       I have just enough time to angle my sled to the right before his dogs come loping up beside me. They move along my sled, then shoulder past it to my dogs.       Saga and Haze both stick their faces directly in the way, stretching their necks for a good sniff. I cringe. Sixteen dogs running this close beside one another at ten miles an hour can make a nice tangled ball in a blink.       "Ahead!" I call, trying to keep the embarrassment out of my voice. Why can't my dogs behave like everyone else's when we're out in public? I'm driving savages. I watch the other team. Focused ahead, no nonsense, passing like pros.       I stare at the musher as he glides by. He's near my age, or maybe a little older. And he's wearing some kind of war uniform that looks like it came out of his great-grandfather's closet.       "Ma'am," he says. He doesn't even watch his dogs to make sure they're going straight, just turns backwards on the runners and bows at me. Bows .       "Hey, Retro," I call. "Why bother? Now I'm going to have to pass you!"       He laughs and then he's out of my range, leaving me with the sounds of the trail--the shush of the runners gliding over sun-softened snow, then the clacking noise they make on the harder, shaded sections of trail. The necklines tinkle, and the wind whistles. I could never run this fast on my own. Never feel the clean bite of air filling up my nostrils. Filling me up.       I'm never as free as I am out here behind this team.       My gaze roves up and down my dogs. Sumo's dipping snow already but keeping pace. The fluorescent strips I've stitched along the backs of the dog harnesses make them stand out, especially on white dogs like Damage and Haze. Without the strips I can hardly tell them from a snowbank. But the real trouble will start at dusk, when everything turns into black blobs, fluorescent strips or not.       A wide-open expanse appears. My team goes down the bank and then moves onto the frozen lake. There's a commotion ahead; I hear it before I see it. Two mushers, yelling.       "Grab your leaders!"       "Sorry! I'm sorry!"       Dogs barking.       Their teams flounder in the snow. I arrive just as the dogfight breaks out. I throw down my snow hook, wondering what to do next. Should I go help? No, I'll surely give myself away, stumbling over dogs.       My team shrieks and lunges to get closer to the action. I'm hesitant to leave the sled in case Sumo pops the hook and we have three teams tangled. But I can't tell what's going on from back here. I creep closer, moving up beside my leaders. The mushers are grabbing armfuls of dogs and tugs.       "They wouldn't listen!" A girl wearing yellow wind pants struggles with a dog as if she's never untangled a dog team before.       "What are you doing?" It's the retro boy who passed me. "Unclip the tug or my dog will get pinched!"       "This one?"       "No, your point dog! Hurry! Yoda, enough!"       His wheel dog, not even in the tangle, is screaming so loud now, it's hard for me to think. Which is why I dive into the fray.       I reach for the girl's leggy point dog, flicking off my mitts as I do so my bare fingers are ready. Once I've grabbed the dog, I go by instinct. Unclip the tug, flip the line under, then reclip her dog. It's all automatic and takes about two seconds.       The line is still tangled.       I walk backwards a few steps with the tugs, straightening the leaders, and squint at the gangline. There. A neckline needs to be unclipped. Once I've got the leaders untangled, I have to hold the leggy dog's collar to prevent him from turning around. It's satisfying to know that my dogs aren't the worst brats ever.       I peer at my team but can see only a line of crazed, hopping mongrels. I'm too far away to tell if the snow hook is coming loose. Please don't come loose .       My feet sink through the crust of snow and I slop around in slush. "You want to get them going," I tell the girl. "I'll hold them out."       She seems to suddenly come out of her fog and leaps onto her sled.       "Hike up!" she yells, and the dogs pitch forward, picking up speed. Her sled zips past me, throwing up a rooster tail of slush.       "Thanks," the boy says. "I think she's new."       I feel a nose shoving at my butt. I turn and recognize the black and silver markings of the boy's lead dog. But then I do a double take and peer closer. Her eyes! "What's wrong with your dog?"       "What?" The boy looks up, then relaxes. "Oh, you mean Zesty. Yeah, she's blind as a bat. Anyway, thanks for your help."       "You . . . your lead dog . . . you have a blind lead dog?"       "She's the best. Hey, love to chat, but should we get going? You know. Race ."       I peer intently into Zesty's face. She's focused on the departing team, ears erect, body tightly coiled. She appears to be watching, but her eyes are fully clouded over. She swivels her face toward me as if sensing I'm staring.       "Your team!"       I jerk my gaze up. The boy lunges for my sled as it shoots past him. His feet get bogged down in the slush. He misses.       I have one chance. I try to line myself in the right place but it's going to be tight. I can't see the sled clearly, and my depth perception is off. How close is it? Where is that handlebar? My dogs rush past me as I lean over, desperate, reaching . . . reaching.        Bam!       My bent arm hooks the handlebar. I swing up onto the runners. Step on the brake. Lean down to where the snow hook should be. There it is. Snag it up. Set it in its cradle. Straighten, focus ahead. Adrenaline still pumping.       I can feel my dogs smiling from here.       I told him I'd pass him. December 7, 1896       Dear Margaret,       I leave the port of Killarney on the morrow with the mail courier Raymond Miron and his team of dogs. There is wild beauty here with windswept pines and stark white cliffs, but also loneliness. I miss home terribly. Alas, the Hudson's Bay Company requires me at White River upon the most haste, and I shall endeavor to comply . . .       Love to little Anna. She will be grown enough to beat me in a horserace when I return.       Your loving brother, William Excerpted from Dog Driven by Terry Lynn Johnson All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.