12/8/2023 0 Comments Firstborn tor seidler![]() Themes of self-acceptance, devotion, and integrity resonate as Maggie and others act on wisdom she learns from her first friend, Jackson the crow: “you can’t be loyal to others if you’re not loyal to your own nature first.” A moving acknowledgement of true friendship provides a heartwarming conclusion to this absorbing tale. National Book Award finalist Seidler illuminates a world full of beauty (“leaves had broken out of their buds, like butterflies out of their cocoons”), danger, and the struggle to survive: deaths come fast and frequent for predators and prey alike. HarperTrophy, 6.95 (, 6.95 ISBN p) ISBN 978-0-06-441039-7 'Seidler chronicles with sensitivity, acumen and humor the adventures of a bratty toddler who eats her two adopted woodchuck parents. Wilderness of Montana and Wyoming just as wolves are being reintroduced to Yellowstone Park. After Maggie realizes that she is different from other magpies (“the thought of spending my whole life with Dan and his junk made me shudder”), she takes off to explore the Lamar wants to make his family happy, but is doing what is expected of him worth losing the only true friend he’s ever had?įull of bite and beauty that will make you think of White Fang, then Ferdinand, this story cuts to the heart of what’s most important: being true to yourself, and being true to others.The designation “firstborn” applies to several characters in Seidler’s animal adventure-the effervescent narrator, Maggie the magpie Blue Boy, a wolf who accepts Maggie as an unofficial pack member and Lamar, Blue Boy’s eldest son, who wrestles with familial duties and his unorthodox love for a coyote. Maggie observes his disappointment in his firstborn son, Lamar, who fails to live up to the alpha male role his father expects of him. While the other infractions can be begrudgingly tolerated, this one cannot, and the unity of the pack is in jeopardy. Blue Boy grows increasingly dismayed at Lamar’s lack of wolf instincts, and then Lamar does the intolerable: he becomes attracted to a coyote. He has little interest in peacocking in front of other clans. He worries if his younger siblings fall behind in the hunt. But Lamar is not turning out the way his father hoped. ![]() Blue Boy, the alpha male of his pack, is the largest wolf many have ever seen, and his dream is to have a firstborn son who will take after him in every way. Born into rankings and expected to live up to their roles. ![]() A young wolf seeks the bravery to be himself in this lyrical homage to challenging societal stereotypes, from the author of National Book Award Finalist Mean Margaret and The Wainscott Weasel. ![]()
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