The Red Pony (Twentieth-Century Classics)
Registered by grubsneerg of Greensburg, Pennsylvania USA on 6/30/2007
This Book is Currently in the Wild!
1 journaler for this copy...
Journal Entry 1 by grubsneerg at Twin Lakes Park in Greensburg, Pennsylvania USA on Saturday, June 30, 2007
Released 16 yrs ago (7/1/2007 UTC) at Twin Lakes Park in Greensburg, Pennsylvania USA
WILD RELEASE NOTES:
RELEASE NOTES:
This is one of several books I will be releasing today at the Westmoreland Arts & Heritage Festival at Twin Lakes. I don't know exactly where or when I'll be leaving it, but check tables and benches and walkways!
This is one of several books I will be releasing today at the Westmoreland Arts & Heritage Festival at Twin Lakes. I don't know exactly where or when I'll be leaving it, but check tables and benches and walkways!
Bought from Patty's Paperbacks in Greensburg, Pa., to liberate in the wild.
I decided to read this one before I released it because Steinbeck's a classic and "The Red Pony" is a book I probably should have read in school at some point but never did. My niece refuses to read books about animals because they always end up dying in the end. She knows what she's talking about. This book contains four short stories concerning the same characters and you see the transformation of the young protagonist from a self-centered little boy to a young man who learns to look past himself and care about the world and the people in it. I can see why they make you read it in school, but it's not one of my favorite reads.
I decided to read this one before I released it because Steinbeck's a classic and "The Red Pony" is a book I probably should have read in school at some point but never did. My niece refuses to read books about animals because they always end up dying in the end. She knows what she's talking about. This book contains four short stories concerning the same characters and you see the transformation of the young protagonist from a self-centered little boy to a young man who learns to look past himself and care about the world and the people in it. I can see why they make you read it in school, but it's not one of my favorite reads.