Secondhand Summer
- Author: Walker, Dan
- Publisher: Alaska Northwest Books (2016)
- Book
- Literary Category: Children's
- Pages: 182
- Cover Type: S - Softcover
- Dimensions: 6.000" x 9.000" x 0.500"
- Weight: 9.0oz
- ISBN-10: 1-943328-42-0
- ISBN-13: 978-1-943328-42-0
SRP: | $12.99 | |||||
Lowest Cost: | $7.79 | |||||
Quantity: | 24 | 4 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Discount | 40 | 35 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Secondhand Summer begins in Ninilchik, a tiny Alaskan community where the Barger family fishes for salmon. The father's death forces a move from their homestead to an apartment in a poor section of Anchorage. Written in the first person and based on the author s own experiences, the tale is about Sam, a fourteen-year-old boy who loved the homestead fishing life he left behind. Like most kids his age, his physical abilities and his imagination exceed his judgment and knowledge. The story focuses on the boy s adventuresome adjustments to the big city, the loss of his father, and becoming a teenager. Sam s new friends lead him on forays into vandalism, petty theft, and trespassing. An abandoned nightclub, which Sam and his friends take over as their fort, absorbs Sam s attention and energy as an escape from an adult controlled world, but his time runs out when the teenagers take over. By the end of the summer, Sam loses his club, one of his new friends, and his idealism, leaving him feeling forever changed as he enters seventh grade, both wilder and wiser. Dan L. Walker is a homesteader s son who grew up to become a teacher and a writer. He has worked as a chef, innkeeper, merchant seaman, fisherman, and carpenter. Drawn from these varied experiences are blogs, essays, professional articles, and fiction published in magazines and literary journals such as the Journal of Geography, Alaska Magazine, and We Alaskans. Dan has more than thirty years in education and was named Teacher of the Year for Alaska in 1999. His consulting work has taken him throughout Alaska from Anchorage to Barrow and Perryville to Sitka where he works with principals, teachers, and students and is rewarded by experiencing the remote Alaska that few people get to know.