Down to earth

Betty Culley

Book - 2021

Ten-year-old aspiring geologist Henry Bower investigates the meteorite that crash lands in the hayfield, discovering a rock that will change his family, his town, and even himself.

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Subjects
Genres
Children's stories
Ecofiction
Published
New York : Crown Books for Young Readers [2021]
Language
English
Main Author
Betty Culley (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
210 pages ; 22 cm
Audience
Ages 8-12.
Grades 4-6.
760L
ISBN
9780593175736
9780593175743
9780593175767
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Ten-year-old Henry, homeschooled and fascinated by rocks, lives on the outskirts of a small town in Maine. He very much hopes that, like his father and one of his uncles, he will also have the ability to find water by dowsing, a gift said to reveal itself at his age. When a meteor blazes earthward one night, he's the only one to see it slam into the field beside his home. The next morning, he finds the enormous, amazing meteorite but doesn't expect the dramatic events that will follow. Wells in town begin to dry up, while water floods his family's field and destroys their home. Is the meteorite drawing water toward itself? Who can put things right? Henry's first-person narrative signals his scientific bent: the night after their home is inundated, he likens his father to "a nocturnal animal, awake when everyone else is asleep," and his mother to "an animal going into hibernation, eating less and slowing down her movements to conserve energy." From Henry, his best friend, and members of his extended family to a visiting geologist from a museum, the characters have layers of complexity that are gradually revealed as the story unfolds at its own steady pace. A captivating middle-grade novel.

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

Gr 4--7--Fascinated with geology, Henry spends hours breaking rocks open. His family members are water dowsers, people who sense sources of water using a dowsing rod. Henry is anxious because water dowsing is not something one can learn from a book, and not everyone in the family has the "gift." When he tries to use a dowsing rod to find water, he feels an urge to hold the stick toward the sky instead of the ground. Soon, a giant meteorite falls to Earth. Henry is ecstatic to find and analyze the rock from space. But the meteorite has brought more than just media attention and a collector offering a giant financial reward--the rock has caused a disaster, and Henry feels responsible. Culley perfectly illustrates Henry's complicated feelings and insecurities. He reacts like any child would, especially when the small town seems to hold him responsible. Poignant, lyrical prose and an engaging mix of geology, astronomy, and wonder will make this title popular, especially for fans of Nancy Viau's Samantha Hansen Has Rocks in Her Head. Henry is cued as white. VERDICT Heartwarming and absorbing, this is a solid choice for middle grade collections. Perfect for readers who want a great small-town story mixed with STEM.--Patrick Tierney, Pascoag P.L., RI

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

After 10-year-old Henry witnesses the fall of a meteorite, disaster finds his Maine home. Henry Bower, of Bower Hill Road, comes from a family of water dowsers, but he hasn't yet shown any talent in this area--his current skills include reading the most books at the library and writing questions about the world in his home-schooling notebook. Henry has a passion for rocks and minerals and is thrilled when he and his little sister find a meteorite to rival the 31-ton Ahnighito in Greenland. An author's note describes, among other things, the controversy over its fate and the "sad and disturbing history of the Inughuit people brought to New York City, along with the meteorite." Henry tries to keep it a secret to protect it from similar theft. A paean to science, the text can be laudably earnest ("I learn that no matter how big or special a meteorite is, someone always wants to take it or chip it") but the dialogue is occasionally stilted. Brief quotes, mostly from nonfiction science resources, open each chapter, intriguing readers who might otherwise wonder where Henry's narrative is going and why. The flood that overtakes Henry's house traumatizes his family, especially when some people in the town blame them for it, but Henry shows impressive kindness and resilience. The main cast reads as White; a visiting scientist who mentors Henry is Black. A meandering, idealistic tale for budding scientists. (author's note) (Fiction. 8-12) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

CHAPTER ONE The pointed end of a forked stick is believed to point toward the ground when it passes over water. --­The World Book Encyclopedia: Volume D When I was five, I watched my father saw a Y-shaped twig off my great-­grandfather's hundred-­year-­old apple tree. I waited to see if he would cut any other letters. There were branches that would make good L's and I's and a curved J just right for my best friend, James. I wondered if Dad would saw off three branches and tie them together to make the H for my name--­Henry. Now I'm one hundred percent older than I was then, and when Dad circles the tree his grandfather planted on Bower Hill Road, I know he's not looking for letters. He's searching for the perfect forked stick for dowsing. He doesn't dowse for buried metal or gemstones. My dad, Harlan Bower, is a water dowser and he uses his stick to find veins of water deep underground. It doesn't have to be apple wood. It can be pear or willow. But if I ever try to dowse for real, I want my first branch to come from my great-­grandfather's tree. Having an H name like my father doesn't make me a dowser. Being a Bower doesn't make me a dowser. Living on Bower Hill Road, with its underground springs and good-­tasting well water, doesn't make me a dowser. My great-­grandfather and grandfather could find fresh water trapped beneath hard granite rock. Sixty-­six-­point-­sixty-­six percent of my grandfather's sons are dowsers. My father: 33.33 percent Uncle Lincoln: 33.33 percent Uncle Braggy: 0 percent My grandfather, my father, and Uncle Lincoln all discovered their water dowser talents when they were ten. I already read about dowsing in the D encyclopedia. It tells what it is, but not why some people can do it and other people can't. My father taught me how to dig a hole with straight sides and how to put rubble rocks in the middle of my stone walls so they can shift with the frost. But when I asked him how to dowse, he said it's not something you can teach, it just happens. I asked which was more important, the stick or the person that held it, and he said both. I asked if it was easier to dowse for water on a rainy day and he said he'd never thought about that. The apple tree has a black gash on the trunk where lightning hit it. No one saw the lightning strike, and the tree kept growing. No one teaches a tree to find water. Its taproot goes straight down into the earth, the same direction my father's dowsing stick bends when it finds water. The day I turned ten, I went up the hill and stood under my great-­grandfather's tree. It was late August and there were so many apples they pulled the branches down around me. I touched the gash where lightning marked the tree. When I looked up, all I could see were Y's. Big Y's, little Y's, straight and crooked, too many to count. I traced the straightest Y with my finger, but I didn't break it off the tree. This perfect Y is at the very end of a branch that grows toward Nana's front porch. It will be an easy one to find again if Dad asks me to dowse for a well. Then I'll finally learn whether my great-­grandfather's abilities were passed down to me or not. If I could have chosen to be a dowser for my tenth birthday present, I would have, but I know Dad would say it's not something anyone else can give you. CHAPTER TWO Dowsing (water witching or water divining) is probably as old as man's need for water. It is an "art" certain people have which enables them to find underground sources of water. --­Joseph Baum, The Beginner's Handbook of Dowsing: The Ancient Art of Divining Underground Water Sources Before we head out into the icy field, James breaks a branch off a wild cherry tree for his dowsing stick. I pull my little sister, Birdie, behind us on her red sled. It's so cold out the snow that falls is gritty like sand and won't stick. It's the kind my father calls dry snow. James holds the Y-shaped branch the way my father and Uncle Lincoln do when they dowse--­palms up, each hand holding an end of the V, elbows at his sides, the end of the Y pointing out in front of him. "What should I dowse for, Henry?" James asks me. "A mammoth tusk like the one we saw in the museum?" "How about Dad's good hammer? He lost it at the top of the field when he was fixing the tractor last summer." "Then I'll dowse in that direction." James's eyes are the clear blue of the sky reflected in the ice, and his blond hair sticks out from under his wool hat. "Keek keek keek." A small hawk glides overhead. "Keek keek," Birdie calls back. Birdie is only two, but she can make a cry just like a hawk. "Keek keek keek," the hawk screeches again, and flies off into the thick woods at the edge of the field. "I think I see something!" James yells, running ahead with his branch. "Look! A deer antler! My best find yet!" He holds up the antler. "I bet this would sell fast on the yard sale table." James brings over the antler, and Birdie and I touch the hard, bony points. Then Birdie starts wiggling her legs in the sled. "Slide down," she says. "Can you say 'Push my sled, Henry'?" I try to get Birdie to say more than two words at a time and to say my name in the sentence. "SLIDE NOW," Birdie tells me. I start her sled with a gentle push, and as it picks up speed, Birdie puts her arms out like wings. The dry snow makes the sled squeak. "You're going fast, Birdie. Hold on to the sides!" I shout. "Steer toward the hay bales!" Dad puts hay bales at the bottom of the hill to stop our sleds so we don't slide out into the road. I watch Birdie zoom down the hill, the red of her mittens two bright spots moving in the air. "I DO!" Birdie shouts back. She doesn't steer with her hands, but she leans her body from side to side, like a hawk in the air. "Here, Henry." James gives me his dowsing stick. "You take it. You're the real dowser. I'm gonna go up in the woods and see if I can knock down some pinecones for your mom to start fires with." He's sure I'm a dowser even though I haven't dowsed for real. The last time I went with Dad on a well-­drilling job, I offered to try dowsing. When I said that, Dad stood still for a second, staring at me, and answered, Lincoln could use a hand digging the drainage ditch. Which didn't make sense, because you don't dig the ditch until you find the spot to drill. And you don't find the spot to drill until you dowse for it. I think he didn't want to watch me try and try and not be able to do it. Or hear what people in town would say when they heard what happened: Too bad that Bower boy can't dowse like his father. James runs across the ice, as excited about getting pinecones for Mom as he was about finding the antlers. I once heard my father say it was wonderful how James gave one hundred percent to whatever he was doing. Especially since he almost drowned with his mother when he was Birdie's age. Excerpted from Down to Earth by Betty Culley 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.