Just having finished the newest book by Sharon Creech, I needed to immediately write a review! Moo is a short novel written in verse and tells the story of a family who decide to leave the hustle and bustle of a big city for a quiet town in the state of Maine. The family of four find themselves in a small harbor town and shortly after arriving the children's parents volunteer Reena and Luke to help Mrs. Falala, a neighbor who is known in the town to be strange and scary. The two children are responsible for taking care of a menagerie of animals, including a pig, a cat, a parrot, a snake, and Zora the Cow. Although it is rough going at first since Reena and Luke have never been around farm animals and were 'inside' people prior to moving, slowly they get more comfortable and learn to get along with both the animals AND Mrs. Falala (fal-LA-la). When Mrs. Falala informs Reena that she will be getting Zora ready to show her at the local fair, Reena doesn't know where to begin. However, with the help of another neighbor, Zep, Reena learns that becoming a cowgirl can mean so much more than just taking care of animals.
This book made me think fondly about growing up on a dairy farm in Minnesota, and the annual county fair. Although my mom always wanted me to join 4-H (because she had participated as a young girl), I preferred to be a spectator--but I did enjoy going to see all the animals at the fair every summer.
My favorite golden lines:
"It's strange how ideas can arrive out of dripsagging blues."
This book made me think fondly about growing up on a dairy farm in Minnesota, and the annual county fair. Although my mom always wanted me to join 4-H (because she had participated as a young girl), I preferred to be a spectator--but I did enjoy going to see all the animals at the fair every summer.
My favorite golden lines:
"It's strange how ideas can arrive out of dripsagging blues."