McTavish Goes Wild
McTavish Goes Wild
Select a format:
Publisher's Hardcover ©2020--
Paperback ©2024--
To purchase this item, you must first login or register for a new account.
Candlewick Press
Just the Series: The McTavish Stories Vol. 2   

Series and Publisher: The McTavish Stories   

Annotation: When a camping trip unleashes a reluctant Peachey family on the great outdoors, it’s up to their savvy dog, McTavish, to... more
Genre: [Animal fiction]
 
Reviews: 2
Catalog Number: #205770
Format: Publisher's Hardcover
Publisher: Candlewick Press
Copyright Date: 2020
Edition Date: 2020 Release Date: 05/05/20
Illustrator: Easton, Grace,
Pages: 82 pages
ISBN: 1-536-20331-9
ISBN 13: 978-1-536-20331-8
Dewey: Fic
Dimensions: 21 cm.
Language: English
Reviews:
ALA Booklist (Sat Feb 01 00:00:00 CST 2020)

Taken as a whole, the Peachey family can be pretty obnoxious. Pa is fearful, unreasonable, and stubborn. Ollie is a lonely, argumentative teen in search of a girlfriend, and his older sister, Ava, is fixated on philosophy. Luckily, their younger sister, Betty, is a good-natured girl, and Ma Peachey is sensible. Otherwise, McTavish, a highly skilled "rescue dog," might have given up on saving this family soon after he adopted them. Instead, he saves their vacation camping trip om sure disaster. How? He encourages singing around the campfire by howling loudly, and he cleverly engineers a family hike up the mountain by getting "lost" and staying ahead of them on the trail. With generous margins, wide-spaced lines of type, and 10 enjoyable gray-scale illustrations created in mixed media and collage, the book has an inviting look. Versatile writer Meg Rosoff shows her lighter side in the ever-amusing McTavish series, which offers episodic stories featuring a memorable canine protagonist and a believably flawed family in need of his help. An appealing choice for early chapter-book readers.

Kirkus Reviews

McTavish returns to save the Peachey family from themselves, living up to his description as a "rescue" dog.In series opener Good Dog, McTavish (2018), the sandy-colored terrier brought a family back from the brink of disaster with sheer cleverness and good humor. In this second title, the role-reversal plot of the new dog training the family continues into summer vacation, as the Peacheys head to the Faraway Campsite. Ma Peachey is excited to head to the idyllic mountains, with flowering fields and a flowing river. But Pa Peachey sees ridiculous danger in the wilderness. Brother Ollie prefers a disco where he can meet girls. And Ava only wants to read German philosophers. Once again, young Betty, the most sensible of the bunch, is ignored by the complaining Peacheys, too selfish to notice the beauty around them. The grumpy family, depicted by Easton with dark hair, fair skin, and pointy noses, decides to pack up and return home-but where is McTavish? A game of hide-and-seek ensues, with the plucky pup staying just out of reach. McTavish is not leading them astray-he is providing them a perfect day experiencing the outdoors. This series has legs to stand on, with clean writing, grayscale illustrations that gently move the action forward, and lovable yet flawed characters needing redemption. Fans will be panting for more.A clearly entertaining read-aloud or read-alone for dog lovers. (Fiction. 7-10)

Reviewing Agencies: - Find Other Reviewed Titles
ALA Booklist (Sat Feb 01 00:00:00 CST 2020)
Kirkus Reviews
Word Count: 7,668
Reading Level: 4.5
Interest Level: 2-5
Accelerated Reader: reading level: 4.5 / points: 1.0 / quiz: 508417 / grade: Middle Grades
Lexile: 750L
Guided Reading Level: S
Fountas & Pinnell: S
1
School's Out!
Betty Peachey opened her eyes.
She could hear birds singing. She could see the sun shining. The air felt warm. Outside her window, bees buzzed and flowers nodded in the breeze.
She listened carefully. There was no shouting and no rushing around. No one was pounding on the bathroom door or stomping down the stairs. There was no smell of burning toast from the kitchen.
 
In the next room, her brother was still asleep.
In the room next to that, her sister was reading the works of a German philosopher whose name no one could spell.
Downstairs, Betty's parents ate breakfast and read the newspaper.
The house was quiet except for the sound of turning pages and munching.
Summer! Betty thought. The first day of summer vacation is the happiest day of the year. Even happier than Christmas.
Lying in her bed, with the sun streaming in through the window, Betty sighed. I must be the happiest girl in the world, she thought.
Lying on his bed under the stairs, McTavish sighed. I must be the happiest dog in the world, McTavish thought. For there is nothing a dog likes more than to have his entire pack gathered together peacefully in one place.
McTavish had made a great deal of progress with the Peachey family since he'd decided to rescue them, but they still required hard work and patience.
Pa Peachey could be extremely stubborn. Ollie Peachey could be argumentative. Ava Peachey tended to read too much German philosophy and come up with too many theories.
Only Betty Peachey and her mother were the sort of calm, sensible, well‑behaved humans that dogs prefer to share a home with.
Training the Peachey family had been slow and difficult, but he was an intelligent dog and was up to the job. He under-stood that a family with an uncertain and 
chaotic past could not be fixed overnight. With a combination of love, patience, and consistent handling, he had helped the Peacheys become far more organized and relaxed than when he had first decided to rescue them.
But there was still a long way to go.
 
2
The Peacheys Choose a Vacation
"Well," said Pa Peachey, when everyone had finally come down to breakfast. "Summer is upon us, and it is time we chose a destination for our family vacation."
"I would like to go to a place with loud dance clubs so I can meet many beautiful girls who will want to be my girlfriend," said Ollie.
 
"I would like to visit the birthplace of the philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche in Germany," said Ava. "There, I will think about philosophy night and day."
"A yoga retreat in India would be perfect," mused Ma Peachey. "There, I might finally achieve my dream of striking a one‑handed tree pose."
Betty Peachey was silent.
Everybody looked at her.
At last she took a deep breath.
"I," she said, "would like to go camping."
"CAMPING?" The Peacheys were aghast.
"Camping? With horrible creeping crawling biting bugs?" said Ava.
"Camping? In the freezing rain? On the cold, hard ground?" said Ollie. "With no Wi‑Fi and nowhere to charge your phone?"
 
"Camping? With poisonous snakes and rats and killer moles?" said Pa Peachey.
There was a long silence, during which the Peacheys gaped at Betty.
"Yes," said Betty. "Camping."
McTavish pricked up his ears to listen.
"For one thing," Betty said, "camping is educational. You pitch your own tent and cook your own food. Camping builds camaraderie and cooperation. It requires skills, like making fires and reading maps. You learn new things and live side by side with nature."
"I don't want to live side by side with nature," said Ollie. "I want a girlfriend."
"I don't want camaraderie," said Ava, glaring at Ollie, "especially if it's with him."
"Nature?" said Pa Peachey. "Nature is full of bears and Tasmanian devils. Nature is just another word for swamps and getting struck by lightning. Nature is falling out of a canoe and drowning. Or getting malaria from mosquitoes. Nature is having to eat crickets or starve to death. I hate nature."
Everyone looked at Pa Peachey.
"Nature," said Betty, "is the wind blowing gently through the trees. It is the sun warming your face. It is the smell of damp earth and the sound of blackbirds singing. Nature is green shoots and new buds. It is daffodils and buttercups. I love nature."
For a long moment, none of the Peacheys said a word.
At last, Ma Peachey spoke. "I think camping is an excellent idea. For one thing, it is not expensive. For another, it does not require cell phones or laptops. And for a third thing, if we went camping, we would not have to put McTavish in a kennel. We could take him with us."
Everyone looked at McTavish, who wagged his tail. In his opinion, this was the best argument in favor of camping.
He walked over to Betty and lay at her feet. Well, not actually at her feet but on her feet.
Pa Peachey shook his head. "This flirtation with nature is a travesty," he said. "It will all end in tears." But nobody paid much attention, because that is what Pa Peachey always said, about practically everything.

Excerpted from McTavish Goes Wild by Meg Rosoff
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.

When a camping trip unleashes a reluctant Peachey family on the great outdoors, it’s up to their savvy dog, McTavish, to show them how it’s done.

It’s summer, and the Peachey family is in crisis — again. Where will they go for their vacation? Betty Peachey thinks that camping is the answer, and Ma Peachey knows just the place. But Pa Peachey is convinced that terrible dangers lurk in the world of nature, Ollie only wants to know if there are dance clubs, and Ava would rather stay home and read German philosophy. Will rescue dog McTavish figure out how to turn the Peacheys into happy campers — and get them to brave the sparkling river and scenic mountainside before they pack up their tent and go home?


*Prices subject to change without notice and listed in US dollars.
Perma-Bound bindings are unconditionally guaranteed (excludes textbook rebinding).
Paperbacks are not guaranteed.
Please Note: All Digital Material Sales Final.