D-39 A Robodog's Journey By: Irene LathamHey hi ho. Is anyone out there?The second US civil war is going from bad to worse, but on her dad's farm out in the middle of nowhere, twelve-year-old Klynt Tovis is having the most boring summer of her life. It's a
Flash Sale Ongoing
D-39
A Robodog’s Journey
By: Irene Latham
The second US civil war is going from bad to worse, but on her dad’s farm out in the middle of nowhere, twelve-year-old Klynt Tovis is having the most boring summer of her life. It’s all bunkers and HAM radios and restoring artifacts for her Museum of Fond Memories. She’s overjoyed when an incredible antique shows up at the farm: a D-39 robodog, invented to replace the old plague-carrying pet species which was exterminated by the government. When the war reaches the farm, she and D-39 are thrown into an epic journey for survival and hope.
A heartwarming dystopic novel-in-verse perfect for fans of Sara Pennypacker’s Pax.
If you like this book, youll enjoy these:
Someone Else’s Shoes
[TABS]
Download the CoverDownload the Discussion Guide
Irene Latham, author
Irene Latham is the author of more than a dozen books, including two novels for children: Leaving Gee’s Bend and Don’t Feed the Boy. Winner of the 2016 ILA Lee Bennett Hopkins Promising Poet Award, her poetry books for children include Nine: A Book of Nonet Poems, Dear Wandering Wildebeest, When the Sun Shines on Antarctica, Fresh Delicious, and Can I Touch Your Hair? (co-written with Charles Waters). Irene lives near Birmingham, Alabama.
Read more aboutIrene.
Kirkus Reviews
Twelve-year-old Klynt Tovis enjoys tinkering with and restoring gadgets. She lives with her father on their family farm in a war-torn country where the greedy, violent, and unjust actions of warring factions have resulted in a time of scarcity and fear. Klynts only company when school is out is her father and, occasionally, her neighbors young son, Jopa. That is, until the day when a D-39 robodoga realistic dog robotturns up on her farm. Klynt and D-39 soon become inseparable. After a bomb forces them into their underground bunker for 21 days, Klynt and her father emerge to discover a world destroyed by violence. They head out for rations but end up separating when Klynt decides to stay back with Jopa, whom they discover all alone. After three days without word from her father, Klynt realizes that something must be wrong and that she must take charge. She sets out with D-39 and Jopa on a journey to find their families and, hopefully, salvation. Latham uses an invented lexicon of delightfully creative and expressive hybrid wordsjinglesnap, boomblasts, itchglitchyto tell this tale of a girl and her dog sticking together through illness, pain, and near-death experiences. This is an appealing story for animal-loving readers seeking a slow-paced, atmospheric adventure story. Human characters read as White by default. A girl-meets-dog story of hope, perseverance, and survival.
Publishers Weekly
Latham (This Poem Is a Nest) melds a dog rescue story with a post-apocalyptic journey in this white-default speculative narrative. Klynt Tovis, 12, lives with her father, Link, on a looganut farm in the Worselands, close to the border of the Wilds. War between the corrupt government of President Vex and the rebel Patriots rages across the country. Dogs have been eradicated as carriers of the deadly BrkX virus and replaced with robosthough those are rare, so Klynt is determined to keep a D-39 robo when it appears at the farm. Soon, D-39 has endeared itself to both Klynt and her neighbor, six-year-old Jopa Tannin. After a lengthy bombardment followed by the disappearance of Klynts father and Jopas mother and older sister, Klynt must lead Jopa and D-39 through the war-torn countryside and wilderness to Everlake, a dog refuge in the Wilds where her veterinarian mother lives. Latham invents numerous words (sparkshine, quirkface, hotseason), imbuing the tale with a whimsical flavor. The palpable isolation Klynt feels will resonate with many readers in the present moment, but any dog lover will appreciate this heartwarming tale of love and perseverance.
Hardcover
ISBN: 978-1-62354-181-1
E-book
ISBN: 978-1-63289-972-9EPUB
Ages: 0-0
Page count: 448
51/2x 81/4
[/TABS]
Reviews
There are no reviews yet.