On the Far Side of the Mountain
3.5/5
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About this ebook
“Surpasses the original in style and substance . . . This story [is] a jewel.”
—Booklist
“George has outdone herself here.”
—Kirkus Reviews
Jean Craighead George
Jean Craighead George wrote over one hundred books for children and young adults. Her novel Julie of the Wolves won the Newbery Medal in 1973, and she received a 1960 Newbery Honor for My Side of the Mountain. Born into a family of famous naturalists, Jean spent her entire career writing books that celebrated the natural world.
Read more from Jean Craighead George
My Side of the Mountain Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsFrightful's Mountain Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Hold Zero! Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Hold Zero! Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5
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Reviews for On the Far Side of the Mountain
221 ratings10 reviews
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
May 25, 2022
I listened to this book while traveling. I found the story engaging, but not as much as the first book. Since I knew the space of time that had occurred since writing the first book and this sequel, I could detect changes in the way the author approached the subject, and also the manner of telling the story.
An entertaining book that is really telling a different type of story then the first book. Instead of a story of a boy living in the wild, this is primarily a story of a boy and friend travelling to rescue...I will leave that to the read to discover.
The ending was very poignant for me, and the capstone of the book. I feel that was very authentic and powerful. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
Sep 9, 2019
Sequel. Sam Gribley's younger sister is living on the mountain with him and has all sorts of ideas for inventions to make life easier, primarily using water power. A conservation warden confiscates Frightful and Sam needs to learn a new way to provide enough meat for the two of them. And adventure ensues, which at times becomes a bit too educational as we learn about birds of prey and the people who covet them.
My son greatly enjoyed this. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
Jun 8, 2014
Excellent book to read to your children. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
Apr 28, 2013
Back in the 1970's I saw a movie, "My Side of the Mountain", about a young man who leaves his home in the city to homestead in the Catskill Mountains. I subsequently read the book upon which the movie was based.
Today I decided to read the sequel, "On the Far Side of the Mountain", which takes place about two years after the first book. Sam is still on his mountain, living with his Peregrine Falcon, Frightful, but also with his younger sister, Alice. Early on in the story Frightful is confiscated by a conservation officer, and then Alice disappears.
With his friend Bando along for company and support, Sam tracks his sister as she heads out of the Catskills, on a quest of her own.
While I can't say I liked this sequel as much as the original story, included are what I loved about "My Side of the Mountain": descriptive passages entailing what Sam does to forage food to eat! It is also illustrated by the author with detailed sketches of devices Sam creates for different purposes.
Well written, interesting, and believable. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
Oct 14, 2011
This sequel to My Side of the Mountain is enjoyable, but not as good as the original. This is more of a novel than the history/journal that the first is. There isn't so much of the problem solving. Sam and Baldo track Sam's snotty sister through the countryside. There is some mystery, but no real risk or problem solving. A worth while read, but not the classic that the first one is. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
Mar 2, 2011
this book is a great book.ever one should read it - Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5
Nov 10, 2010
World literature Book review “On the Far Side of the Mountain”
Book Story: A brother and sister live on a mountain and the brother gets his bird confiscated and his sister leaves him he sets out to find his sister and goes through the jungle with his friend and finds floor compasses and already ready and dug up food and hints leading him toward her he finds the men who confiscated his bird and finds out they are not real police so he sets out after them two they find a area were his sister and the bird catchers have been and set out to find them after words he finds his sister and tells her what has happened they go and get the bird.
I did not like this story it was a slow long detailed story about the wild and evil people who catch rare birds. I recommend this book for people who are fascinated by the wild. This story was confusing because there were hints and puzzles that you had to think about before continuing.
Overall this story was not for me and seemed to take too long to finish. - Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5
Apr 8, 2009
I liked this one a bit more than the first book in the series. I still didn't care much for the survival skills information, but I thought the adventure aspect of the story was more enjoyable than what was in My Side of the Mountain. Overall, it's not one of my favorites, but I don't regret the time taken to read it. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
Feb 11, 2009
This book is a continuation of the My Side of the Mountain story. Sam's family is explored in greater detail while continuing to educate about survival in the wild. The depth of understanding about nature and our environment that these books provide is excellent. - Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5
Sep 2, 2008
I only read this b/c my son SO loved My Side of the Mountain that he wanted to continue. I can't really recommned it, it is quite paltry in comparison to the original.
Book preview
On the Far Side of the Mountain - Jean Craighead George
In Which
A Storm Breaks
This June morning is hot and humid with a haze so dense I can barely see the huge hemlock tree in which I live. I like the haze. It has erased all but the great tree trunks, making my mountaintop home as simple as it was when I first came here more than two years ago.
I lean back in the lounging chair I constructed from bent saplings held together with rope made from the inner bark of the basswood tree, and enjoy the primitive forest.
A wind rises as the sun warms the earth. The haze moves off, and I see my pond, my millhouse, and the root cellar. The first year I lived here I had only a tree, a bed, and a fireplace. But one idea led to another, and the next thing I knew, I had built myself a habitat. Things just kept evolving. Take this lounging chair, for instance. One day I replaced the old stump I sat on with a three-legged stool, and then I replaced the three-legged stool with this comfortable chair.
The people changed, too. At first I was alone. Then my family arrived and—except for my lively sister, Alice—departed. I don’t know where Alice is this morning. She was going to go strawberry picking, but the haze is too dense for that. Maybe she’s sitting on the porch of her tree house talking to herself just as I am. A haze mutes not only the birds and beasts, but people, too.
As a hot dry wind clears the air, I can see Frightful, my peregrine falcon, sitting in front of the six-foot-in-diameter hemlock tree that I hollowed out for a home. Unlike the chairs and people, Frightful has not changed. She still holds her body straight up and down and her head high in the manner of the peregrine falcon. Her tawny breast is decorated with black marks; her back is gray blue; her head black. When she flies, she is still a crossbow in the sky, and she still waits on
above my head until I kick up a pheasant or a rabbit. Then she stoops, speeding toward her prey at two hundred miles an hour, the fastest animal on earth. She almost never misses.
Hello, Frightful,
I say.
Creee, creee, creee, car-reet,
she answers. That is her name for me, Creee, creee, creee, car-reet.
All peregrine falcons call the high-pitched creees, but when Frightful sees me in the morning or when I return from the forest, even when she is flying high above my head, she adds car-reet.
Hello, Sam,
she is saying.
She is perched on a T-block that I covered with deer-hide to protect her feet. She lifts a broad foot and scratches her head with a curved claw on the end of a long, narrow toe.
Creee, creee, creee, car-reet.
I call her name in her own language; I whistle three notes—low, high, low. She responds by lifting the feathers on her body, then shaking them. This is called rousing, which is feather talk meaning I like you.
I can’t speak in feathers so I answer by imitating her love notes. I do this by pulling air through my two front teeth to make a soft, cozy sound.
Sometimes I have nightmares that she has left me. I awake in a sweat and try to reason with myself. Frightful will not leave me, I say. If she were going to do that, she would have departed last spring when I was flying her free. A wild tercel, the male peregrine falcon, passed overhead. The last of the vanishing eastern peregrine falcons breed in Greenland and Canada, and a few winter as far south as the Catskills. This one was on his way to his home in the north. Frightful playfully joined him. Together they performed the peregrine courtship dance, swooping low, zooming high, then spiralling earthward. I was scared. I thought Frightful was going to leave me. I whistled. She instantly pulled deeply on her wings and sped back. Within a few feet of my outstretched hand, she braked and alighted on my glove as softly as the fluff from a dandelion seed. Creee, creee, creee, car-reet,
she said. Hello, Frightful,
I answered happily.
Now, I whistle her name again. She turns her head and looks at me. Her curved, flesh-ripping beak looks sweet and demure when you see her head on. Her overhanging brow shades large black eyes that are outlined in white feathers. She is a gorgeous creature.
At peace with me and herself, she bobs her head as she follows the flight of a bird. I cannot see it, but I know it’s a bird because Frightful’s feathers tell me so. She has flattened most of them to her body while lifting those between her shoulders. Bird,
that means. Human
is feathers flattened, eyes wide, neck pulled in, wings drooped to fly.
I get to my feet. I have daydreamed enough. While the last of the haze burns off, I weed the meadow garden and split kindling before returning to my tree.
A hot sun now filters down through the lacy needles of the hemlocks in my grove. I look for Alice, wondering what she’s up to. That’s how one thinks of Alice—what is she up to? She’s probably gone downmountain to the farm to see that pig she talks to.
Sticks snap in the distance. Someone is coming. Frightful has clamped her feathers to her body to say that whoever it is is not a friend. Her feathers read danger.
The phoebe clicks out his alarm cry and I tense. I have learned to heed these warning signals. The birds and animals see, hear, smell, and feel approaching danger long before I do. I press my ear to the ground and hear footsteps. They are heavy: possibly a black bear.
I smell the musky scent of warning from my friend Baron Weasel. The Baron, who was living here when I arrived, considers himself the real owner of the mountaintop, but because he finds me interesting, he lets me stay.
Right now he doesn’t like what’s coming and dives into his den under the boulder. I glance at Frightful again.
Her feathers are flattened to her body, her eyes wide, neck stretched, and her wings are lowered for flight. Human,
she is saying. I wait.
A man in a green uniform rounds the bend, sees me, and hesitates as if uncertain.
Hello,
I say aloud, and to myself: Here it comes. He’s some official. I’ve got to go to school this fall. Dad didn’t pay the taxes on the farm. Alice is up to something again.
Do you know where Sam Gribley lives?
he asks.
Here,
I answer. I’m Sam Gribley.
Oh,
he says and glances at my face, then my berry-dyed T-shirt, and finally, my moccasins. These seem to confuse him. Apparently he is not expecting a teenager.
Suddenly he looks over my shoulder and walks past me. I spin around to see him standing before Frightful.
My name is Leon Longbridge,
he says with his back to me. I’m the conservation officer. You’re harboring an endangered species—a peregrine falcon.
I am unable to speak.
Keeping an endangered species carries a fine and a year’s imprisonment.
I didn’t know that.
He faces me.
You should have, but since you didn’t, I won’t arrest you. But I will have to confiscate the bird.
I can’t believe what I am hearing.
I’ll let her go,
I say. I’ll turn her free.
I step between my bird and the man. Won’t everything be all right if she’s free?
No,
he snaps. I’m a falconer, too. You set her loose, and as soon as I’m gone, you’ll whistle and she’ll come right back.
He walks up to her and places his gloved hand under her breast. She steps up on it as she has been trained to do.
With a twist of his wrist he slips a hood over her head and tightens the drawstrings with his teeth and free hand. He is a falconer, I see, and a good one. My knees feel rubbery.
Frightful sits quietly. She cannot see, so she does not move, which is the reason for a hood. If a falcon is hooded she will not bate, that is, she won’t fly off your fist and hang head down by her jesses, beating her wings and hurting herself.
What will you do with her?
I ask.
How old was she when you got her?
About ten days.
"Then I can’t let her go. She’s imprinted on you. If you raise a bird from a chick, it thinks you’re its mother and that it looks like you. Such a bird won’t mate with its kind, because it sees people as its kind. Set free it is worthless as far as the perpetuation of the species is concerned. And perpetuation of the species is what protecting endangered animals is all about—to let them breed and increase their kind.
No hunger streaks,
he comments as he turns Frightful on his fist and looks her over. I must say, you take good care of your bird for a kid.
Hunger streaks appear in tail and wing feathers if a bird does not get the right food during the time the feathers are growing in.
I am thinking what to do. Mr. Longbridge has wrapped the leash tightly around his hand and now begins to move.
I walk beside him, desperately working out a plan to save her.
I try pity. Sir, I need that bird badly. I hunt with her. She provides food for my table.
There’s a supermarket in Delhi,
he says, hurrying along. I hurry along, too.
I try politeness. Please, sir, let her go.
You heard me.
The sun now shines out of a hazeless sky, and I can see his face more clearly. He has bony cheeks, a long nose, and heavy brows. Dark crow’s-feet mark the corners of his eyes.
I try reason. Sir, you say you can’t let her go because she won’t breed. If she is useless, I might as well keep her. She’s useful to me.
She’ll be bred in captivity.
But how, if she won’t mate?
Artificial insemination. The university has a very successful artificial breeding program for endangered birds of prey.
He is holding Frightful out from his body; I reach out to grab her. He sees me move and draws Frightful against his chest. I can’t reach her.
I try philosophy. But captive birds are not really birds. A bird must be part of the landscape and sky to be complete.
Her young will be returned to the wild,
he replies. The juveniles are hacked to freedom.
He really is a falconer. Hack is an old falconry term. Trainers put young unleashed birds who are just learning to fly and hunt on a hack board, a sort of artificial nest. They leave them there with food, just as the parents do at the nest. The youngsters, falconers say, are at hack
—free to fly and hunt. If they miss their prey, they come back to the board to eat. After a juvenile makes its first kill, the falconers leash and train it. I guess Frightful’s young would be put at hack, but not jessed and leashed when they learned to hunt. Instead, they would fly on and live out their lives in the wild. I ask the officer if that is so.
He ignores me, so I get in front of him and walk backwards while trying to think what to do next.
Pity didn’t work. Politeness didn’t work. Reason and philosophy failed. I try compassion. I love that bird. She knows me. We are bonded. She’ll die without me.
She’ll adjust. All she needs is the right food.
Walking backwards, I see the color of the officer’s eyes. One is brown and the other is blue. I am so fascinated that I lose the perfect opportunity to cut Frightful free, because, in spite of the hood, she bated and
