Dog Tags #4: Divided We Fall (Volume 4) - Couverture souple

Livre 4 sur 4: Dog Tags

London, C. Alexander

 
9780545477079: Dog Tags #4: Divided We Fall (Volume 4)

Synopsis

Man's best friend goes to war.

LOYALTY ABOVE ALL ELSE.

Andrew believes in the importance of loyalty. He is loyal to his family. He is loyal to his hound dog, Dash. And he is loyal to his country, the Confederate States of America.

Although he's too young to join the Confederate Army, Andrew is welcomed into the Home Guard, a group of men who track down deserters and runaways. He and Dash make a great team. But hunting people is very different from hunting raccoons. And soon Andrew's loyalty will be tested like never before.

Dog Tags is a series of stand-alone books, each exploring the bond between soldier and dog in times of war.

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À propos de l?auteur

C. Alexander London is an author of books for children and adults. In addition to the Dog Tags and Tides of War series, he writes the Accidental Adventures novels for young readers and books like One Day the Soldiers Came: Voices of Children in War for older readers. When he is not writing books, he can usually be found walking around New York City talking to his dog.

Extrait. © Reproduit sur autorisation. Tous droits réservés.

From DOG TAGS #4: DIVIDED WE FALL"Aooo! Aooo!" Dash said."I got it, boy," I told him, and I unslung my rifle. There was a bloody streak running up the trunk, and I followed it with my eyes to where the branches started, and I searched and searched, like I was looking for a raccoon hiding up the tree. Then I saw it, the curled-up shape of a person trying to keep out of sight in the crook of a big branch where the leaves was still thick. Every time he moved, a rain of yellow, red, and orange leaves spiraled down from the branch and settled on the ground. No foolin' those leaves. They gave his position away with their rustlin' and fallin'."I see you up there!" I said.I heard no reply, but I saw the figure move, and it almost took my breath outta me. It weren't no deserter up in the tree, and it weren't no man either. It was a girl, her skin dark as a moonless night, her clothes all torn and tattered, her hair knotted and tangled with leaves and thorns and such, and her bare feet and legs bleeding something fierce.I didn't need to have Pa's smarts to know what she was: contraband. That's what folks call a runaway slave.She was the first one I ever saw, and it was my duty as a citizen of the South to bring her to justice.

Les informations fournies dans la section « A propos du livre » peuvent faire référence à une autre édition de ce titre.