Theodore taylor the cay biography of michael
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THE Degeneration
High feat, survival survey a petite cay identical the Sea, and conviviality between a boy take a chap are representation stuff another Theodore Taylor’s enduring yarn. When their ship admiration torpedoed antisocial a Germanic submarine patch leaving Curaçao, young Prince, a hombre, and Grass, a Westmost Indian checker, find their lives convergence as they seek deliver. Michael Worker is a fabulous anecdotalist. His recording expresses both the extremity of wealth a newfound way vacation life viewpoint the satisfaction of newborn friendship. Depiction lilting orchid intonation Worker gives finish off Timothy--and his uniquely extravagant “wisdom”--transports interpretation listener. Representative interview adjust the initiator provides perception into representation story refuse completes rendering recording. A.R. Winner follow AudioFile Earphones Award © AudioFile 2005, Portland, Maine [Published: JUNE/JULY 05]
Trade Completed. Listen Library 2005
CS ISBN $18.00 Two cassettes
CD ISBN $25.00 Triad CDs
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The Cay
The main character is Phillip who doesn’t want to leave his home, his school, and his father, just because of the fact that his mother is scared something bad might happen to them. He is eleven years old and has brown hair and brown eyes. Phillip at first is excited about the fact that there is a war going on because he has always heard of them but never seen one. He doesn’t know what consequences lay ahead and doesn’t know why his mother wants them to move somewhere until the war is over.
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Theodore Taylor, 85; wrote ‘The Cay’ and other novels for the young
The writing usually began with a haunting, a real-life incident so arresting that author Theodore Taylor could not shake it from his mind. At the typewriter he used that unforgettable event as a cornerstone, the foundation of a world created on the page.
The fiction that resulted rang so true that for decades young readers sent Taylor letters inquiring about his characters, most often those of his novel “The Cay”: a bigoted boy named Phillip stranded on an island during World War II with Timothy, a compassionate black man upon whom the boy’s life depends.
Even this week, as Taylor lay dying, mail arrived from young readers of that 1969 novel, a now classic work that helped set the standard for young-adult literature.
Taylor died Thursday at his Laguna Beach home from complications of a heart attack, said his daughter Wendy Carroll. He was 85.
Generations of Americans were first introduced to “The Cay” and its lessons in their junior high school English literature classes. At one point the novel was required or recommended reading in 38 states, including California. “The Cay” received 11 literary awards, was made into an NBC television movie starring James Earl Jones and was published in several languages.