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S**Q
4th grade Literature Circle/Novel Study
I am a 4th grade teacher and used this book for a novel study/Literature circle. The following are honest reviews from some of my students.I would give this book 5 stars and would recommend it to older grades because it may be hard for younger kids to understand the plot and it involves immortality/ death/dying. My favorite part is when the stranger tries to take Winnie away but fails.I would give this book 4.5 stars and recommend it to readers who like suspense and mystery. My favorite part was Mae's son tries to break Mae out of prison.
P**S
Hello toad ...
Tuck Everlasting is the fifth book that my daughter and I have read this summer. It is a winning and thoroughly engaging story that has left both of us talking and thinking.The main thought of the book is, "would you want to live forever?" Good question! We follow the main character, Winnie, as she tackles this complicated decision.At the beginning of the story Winnie is a very sheltered and safe little girl (10 years old). She plays in her carefully groomed front yard, watching things around her (including a thirsty toad). Her world is safe, slow, and somnolent - seemingly napping in the hot, dry sun.The catalyst for change occurs when a man in a yellow suit (no, not hat, you Curious George fans). He is asking questions and seems unduly curious when they (the man and Winnie) hear a strange, almost elfin tune. The man is excited. The girl (Winnie)is motivated to make a surge forward. She runs into the forest where she discovers a young man (Jesse Tuck) drinking from a fountain hidden under stones at the base of a tree. I know, it sounds like a fairy tale. The story does come across as magical. The question is do you believe? Does Winnie believe?Winnie is taken (kidnapped) back to the Tuck home. The house is hidden deep in the country, secluded and existing in a time of its own. The Tucks move Winnie from her safe life to a different world. Their home is messy and disorganized in contrast to her own neat home. The Tucks are delighted to meet her and treat her like a treasured family member. This also is in contrast to her own more reserved family.Throughout her time at the Tucks they tell Winnie their story. Does she believe they will live forever? Will she keep their secret? Does Winnie want eternal life?Different family members present different perspectives to Winnie. Jesse (stuck at about 17) is full of life and is excited by all the world has to offer. The patriarch of the family (simply called Tuck) takes her out to the lake to explain his viewpoint. He points out to Winnie the way the tides of the pond move, all the bugs, and birds, and etc. He explains how everything is born, grows, is in a constant state of flux, and then dies. His family has stopped changing, maturing, growing.The man in the yellow suit eventually finds Winnie and the Tucks. His plan is to sell the water to "worthy" customers who can afford his hefty price. The matriarch of the family (Mae) kills the man She cannot allow the secret (to her the disaster, the epidemic) to spread to an unsuspecting public. My daughter reminds me too of what a burden this would be to the earth if no one ever died.Mae is faced with hanging - something which would surely lead to the exposure of her secret. Winnie helps Mae escape. This is a huge departure for her. It is definitely not something she would have done before the Tucks. She is part of their world,their family now. They love each other. The act is not a legal thing to do but is it a moral thing to do? The Tucks have changed her and Winnie is willing, indeed eager, to help. The consequences are grave. Her family is shamed in front of the whole town. When questioned Winnie can only answer that she did it for love. This her mom understands. Her family forms a fortress around her then, protecting her. Winnie comes to recognize their love for her as well.Before Jesse leaves Winnie for the last time, he gives her a vial of the Spring water. He asks her to think about drinking it when she turns 17 so they can explore all of eternity together. Will she or won't she?The final scene is of Tuck and Mae arriving back in the main town many years later. Everything has changed. The reader has the sense that the Tucks are getting more and more stretched - like Bilbo in LOTR. Their anchor to life is back 100 years. The longer their bodies live, the less they themselves seem to be part of the living world. The reader eventually finds out if Winnie drank the water or not. The answer makes the Tucks both sad and happy. The answer also leaves the reader questioning her decision and pondering their own reactions. Overall, a very satisfying book.
H**I
Five Stars: A book that should be treasured and read time and time again.
Winnie Foster is tired of being cooped up and pampered. She is the only child of the Fosters who live in the "touch me not" cottage at the edge of the small woods. At ten, Winnie wants to see the world. Winnie promises the toad sitting by her gate that tomorrow she will run away to the woods. The next day, Winnie makes good on her promise. As she traverses the small wood, she wonders why she has never bothered to explore them before. Suddenly, a small movement catches her eye. Winnie peers around a large tree and sees a handsome teenager drinking from a small spring. Winnie decides she wants a drink, but Jessie Tuck insists she not drink from that spring. Suddenly, Winnie is tossed on the back of a horse and kidnapped by the Tuck family. They have an unbelievable story to tell her about that small spring. Will Winne protect their secret?What I Loved:*Tuck Everlasting is the book that took hold of me and rooted in my soul when read it. I was ten years old when I first met Winnie and the Tucks. Over thirty years later, this small little book and its wonderful characters are still speaking to me. I adore this book! It is one that will always remain on my shelf. It is the book that stirred something inside of me and made me fall in love with gorgeous writing and simple story telling. This is a timeless book that should be read and loved by everyone.*The writing is absolutely lovely. It is filled with rich descriptions, beautiful metaphors and similes. It is the book that made me fall in love with gorgeous writing.*The characters are unforgettable. Just like Winnie, I quickly fell in love with the simplistic and kind Tucks. This wonderful little family who are either blessed or cursed to live forever got inside my head. At first, you think it would be wonderful to live forever, but when you hear the melancholy story of the Tucks, you pause and reconsider. There is something so endearing about the kind, sad Angus Tuck. Mae is sweet and motherly, the salt of the earth. Miles with his heartbreak makes me sad, and I truly hope that he finds a way to do something great. Jesse is the boy who stole my heart. I fell in love with this fun,spirited boy. Winnie at ten, is a girl who is wise beyond her years, and I admired her courage. I could go on and on, but I won't. Just read the book.*The story is simple and yet complex. Beautiful story telling that makes you think and ponder. I am still mulling over the book after all these years. I catch myself often during that first week of August wondering about the Tucks. It is the type of story that gets into your head, your heart and burrows into your soul and it never lets go. In my heart, I hope the Tucks are out there and that they have found their peace.And The Not So Much:*My only complaint is that the book is sweet and short and I crave more. I want to know what happened to Winnie after the fall out. How did her life turn out? Did she ever try to find the Tucks? Why did she make the decision she did regarding the water? I wish that there had been more on her.*I also was sad that in the final pages that there wasn't any mention of Miles and Jesse. How had they fared over all those years? What were they doing?Tuck Everlasting is the book from my childhood that still speaks to me all these years later. It is a magical, beautiful and haunting story about a girl who encounters a family with a big secret, a family either blessed or cursed with immortality. Leaving you to wonder what would you do if you could live forever? I urge you if you have not read this lovely little book to pick it up and do so. I have it forever on my shelf and I look forward to the day that I can read it to my children.I received a copy of this book from the publisher in exchange for an honest review. All opinions are my own and I was not compensated for this review.Posted@Rainy Day Ramblings.
T**L
Book report
Son had to have this book for a book report in his 6th grade English class. Having read this before I knew the story. He said that he enjoyed it as well, although he found the age gap odd.
S**
So Nostalgic
Tuck Everlasting has been my favorite book ever since I was a girl. The story follows a young girl with the question everyone daydreams about, "What does it mean to live forever?" It makes a great gift since it is an easy read and has an overall great message!!
K**S
innocence of Childhood
What a sweet story of friendship found and held forever in the hearts of all of the characters in the book!
A**R
Quick Read
I read this book in 6th grade and Iโm 18 now. I couldnโt stop thinking about it since then and itโs still an amazing lil book:)
A**2
Modern Fairy Tale On The Water Of Life
Medieval alchemists firmly believed in the existence of the Water of Life which, once drunk, made you live forever, and modern science is looking for it now.Written in the 1970s, just when scientists were first thinking that immortality might actually be possible, was this short novel for 9+ years. In early 19th century America a pioneering family, the Tucks, do stumble on a spring with water that gives them immortality when drunk, though it take them another twenty years to realise it, and then they have to go undercover to live before their neighbours denounce them as witches etc. Eighty years later, towards the end of the 19th century, a young girl called Winnie stumbles on their secret, which leads to complications for all of them. The end of the novel takes place in the brash, ramped-up 1950s, and the Tucks are still trying to lie low. How they'd continue to manage to keep their secret in today's CCTV world is an intriguing thought.It's a very simple story, but it is so beautifully written, with such lyrical language and great sensitivity, that it is deservedly a classic of children's literature.
H**A
Short and bittersweet
This book is marketed as a children's book but as an adult, it reads similar to brothers Grimm, Hans Christian Anderson and Herman Hesse.I read it in one sitting as it is very easy to read.I had always heard of it but never read it or watched the film. I'm glad I finally have. No spoilers. It's about a young girl, who as an only child, is watched constantly and longs for freedom and adventure. She finds all that come true over a few short days and the story unfolds quickly.If you've ever been curious about the title, its worth a read.
P**C
Lovely
'Tuck Everlasting' is a lovely story which I enjoyed reading, there was an innocence about it and Winnie, the main character is a great character, as are all the Tucks who make such a impression on Winnie.The only downside of the story is that it was too short. I will definitely read 'Tuck Everlasting' again.
A**
Not for me!
I understand that this book is loved my many, however I just couldnโt get into it sadly.
C**E
It was such a great, magical story that had me hooked even at ...
I read this book due to the possibility of seeing the musical on Broadway and I am only sorry I did not come across it earlier. It was such a great, magical story that had me hooked even at 29! As a teacher, it has been added to my recommended reads list for my children
Trustpilot
5 days ago
2 weeks ago