Unfortunately, I did not totally care for Scott Brick's reading-I felt it was overwrought and entirely too dramatic at times, yanking me out of the dust of the Great Depression and on to a Shakespearean stage. Odie plays the harmonica and is quite the storyteller, providing a meta-narrative within the book itself. Krueger includes a whole host of characters-some who occasionally border on caricature-but all of whom are as engaging as Minotaurs and Sirens. At the center of everything is Odie, who is twelve-going-on-thirteen, a thoughtful-yet-precocious courageous young person who in addition to his own very personal journey, fits the Campbellian monomyth archetype pretty well. history, notably the abuse and murder of indigenous peoples. The story is engaging and it is tough in its truths pulled from actual U.S. Odie O'Banion, his brother Albert, their friend Mose, and little Emmy, travel along the Mississippi River in what is a bit of a coming-of-age story, but more truly along the lines of an epic odyssey. Set in a summer in 1932, four "vagabond" children set out on an "odyssey," escaping the horrors of the Lincoln School in Minnesota - a residential Indian school run by the deceitful and abusive Brickmans.
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