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DOG BONE SOUP (Historical Fiction): A Boomer's Journey Kindle Edition
- LanguageEnglish
- Publication date12 January 2015
- Reading age13 - 18 years
- Grade level7 - 12
- File size621 KB
Product description
About the Author
Product details
- ASIN : B00S5RMUDK
- Language : English
- File size : 621 KB
- Simultaneous device usage : Unlimited
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Sticky notes : On Kindle Scribe
- Print length : 216 pages
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Inspired by nature and human nature, author Bette A. Stevens is a retired elementary and middle school teacher, a wife, mother of two and grandmother of eight. Stevens lives in central Maine with her husband on their 37-acre farmstead where she enjoys reading, writing, gardening, walking and reveling in the beauty of nature. She advocates for children and families, for childhood literacy and for the conservation of monarch butterflies (milkweed is the only plant that monarch caterpillars will eat). The author is currently (2019) working on two poetry collections. MY MAINE: Haiku through the Seasons (Poetry & Photography Collection (2019).
Stevens’s children’s book, THE TANGRAM ZOO and WORD PUZZLES TOO! was first published in 1997 by Windswept House Publishing, Mt. Desert, ME; a second edition was self-published by the author in 2012. AMAZING MATILDA, Stevens's second children's book, self-published in 2012 won a 2013 Purple Dragonfly Book Award (Honorable Mention for Excellence in Children's Literature - Ages 6 and older category) and also placed #9 on The 2013 Gittle List for Self-published Children’s Picture Books. Stevens has written articles for ECHOES, The Northern Maine Journal of Rural Culture based in Caribou, Maine. In 2013, the author published her first book for the YA/Adult audience: PURE TRASH, a short story of a boy growing up in rural New England in a family whose poverty and alcoholism mark him as a target for bullying by young and old alike. This short story is a prequel to Stevens's début novel DOG BONE SOUP (KCT International Literary Award Top Finalist 2017). Stevens is currently working on two poetry collections. MY MAINE, Haiku through the Seasons (Poetry & Photography Collection/JUNE 2019).
From The Author:
"I love to walk and enjoy nature's beauty, whether at home or on the go. I'm passionate about the beauty in the world around me and enjoy jotting down notes and composing short poems. The coast is one of my favorite places to relax. I'm a nature collector: everything from seashells to birds' nests. When I was teaching, these treasures filled my classroom and provided inspiration for reading, writing and research. It was hands-on fun and excitement and I enjoyed every moment spent learning with, from and about my students. One thing I learned is that many children don't have an adult to read to them or listen to them read and talk about those books. Many of my blog and facebook posts will focus on how we can improve childhood literacy by reading to the children in our families and communities. My own childhood was filled with books and adults who shared and encouraged a love of reading. I've written some poetry and several short stories. I plan to write some adult fiction, including a coming of age story, and write reviews on some of my favorite books. I'll be sharing some of your stories, poems and tips on reading and writing, too. Let's have fun learning, living, sharing and loving language together." Bette A. Stevens
9/24/12 LINDA LOEGEL INTERVIEW excerpts:
Q: What prompted you to write "AMAZING MATILDA: A Monarch's Tale"?
Bette: As a prolific reader, and with some creative writing experiences in my new 'teacher toolbox,' I was hooked right from the start. Meld that love of literature with a desire to inspire students to be all they can be and you've got a brand new children's book writer: me, the author of AMAZING MATILDA: A Monarch's Tale, my second children's book. The teacher me wanted to integrate a story with core curriculum elements. A Monarch would be the perfect main character: as an indicator species and with Monarch habitat (milkweed) rapidly disappearing, it would be a great way for children to learn life science and environmental science concepts, all while enjoying an inspiring story. Monarch research was my first step. I thought the fit would be perfect because the challenges to be met in the natural world parallel the challenges to be met in the lives of the children. And so, I started to write and rewrite and rewrite... All of the tweaking was on the literary side of the story. I wanted it to be used to teach (model) the use of repetition, alliteration, metaphor and simile in writing stories. It was lots of fun and the first year I placed Matilda's story in a storybook format in a binder (no illustrations yet). I read it aloud and my fourth graders wanted to read it during their free time and make their own illustrations. We were raising silkworms in the classroom at the time. I continued to read the story aloud to my students (4th, 5th and 6th graders) over the years. During that time, I continued to make revisions and used those models as a teaching tool as well. As a retired teacher, I've had time this year to create the illustrations (pencil sketches and watercolor). My background in desktop publishing gave me the incentive to check the internet to find out about self-publishing. Voila! After more than a decade: AMAZING MATILDA, is now written, illustrated and published.
Q: What is your advice to would be writers?
Bette: NEVER GIVE UP: You can do anything you really want to do if you try long enough and hard enough, especially with help and encouragement from your friends. (The theme of AMAZING MATILDA) The internet is such a great resource for connecting with other writers, readers, marketers, publishers. Join groups that fit into your niche. Then, connect with other writers and find out what they're doing. Read them, follow them, leave comments and ask questions. There is a wonderful world of encouragers on the Web.
Customer reviews
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Top reviews
Top review from Australia
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Dog Bone Soup is the story of Shawn Daniels, a dirt poor American Kid whose focus is his younger siblings and his forever struggling mother. He protects his siblings from the devastating reality that his father is a drunk who drowns the family's income on his addiction.
Reading Dog Bone Soup is hard, yet equally addictive. You find yourself forever pining for Shawn and his family, unable to put the story down. Each page draws to the ever increasing reality of where the book begins; Shawn will eventually leave to enlist in the military.
Set in the late fifties after the introduction of television into the family home, Shawn and his siblings find their deserved childhood in games made up on the family's property. There's an innocence about the children in their daily lives, however it is fraught with the overshadowing cloud of the very grown up truth that awaits them at home.
Shawn's mother files for divorce, and it isn't until he confronts his father that Shawn really proves he has become the man of the house. He has no reservations; no hesitation. He has to take on this role and ensure his family survives, one bowl of dog bone soup at a time.
Shawn's story focuses on the tough issues. Alcoholism, bullying and abuse. There is no sugar coating his world, it's brutal, however Shawn won't go down without a fight, and that's what really makes this story a must read.
Heartbreaking, rewarding and even a little humbling, Dog Bone Soup is one story I won't forget.

Dog Bone Soup is the story of Shawn Daniels, a dirt poor American Kid whose focus is his younger siblings and his forever struggling mother. He protects his siblings from the devastating reality that his father is a drunk who drowns the family's income on his addiction.
Reading Dog Bone Soup is hard, yet equally addictive. You find yourself forever pining for Shawn and his family, unable to put the story down. Each page draws to the ever increasing reality of where the book begins; Shawn will eventually leave to enlist in the military.
Set in the late fifties after the introduction of television into the family home, Shawn and his siblings find their deserved childhood in games made up on the family's property. There's an innocence about the children in their daily lives, however it is fraught with the overshadowing cloud of the very grown up truth that awaits them at home.
Shawn's mother files for divorce, and it isn't until he confronts his father that Shawn really proves he has become the man of the house. He has no reservations; no hesitation. He has to take on this role and ensure his family survives, one bowl of dog bone soup at a time.
Shawn's story focuses on the tough issues. Alcoholism, bullying and abuse. There is no sugar coating his world, it's brutal, however Shawn won't go down without a fight, and that's what really makes this story a must read.
Heartbreaking, rewarding and even a little humbling, Dog Bone Soup is one story I won't forget.

Top reviews from other countries


Told from oldest son Shawn’s point-of-view Dog Bone Soup is the tale of the Daniels family. Shawn is bright and intelligent, devoted to his younger siblings and his mother. He’d hold he same regard for his father if the man didn’t go on drinking binges and turn on Shawn’s mother.
With a father who is considered the town drunk, and a family forced to eke out a hardscrabble living, Shawn dreams of escaping and one day becoming an Air Force pilot.
If this story sounds bleak, it’s far from it. Rather it is a vividly told tale of a family that finds ways to circumvent the poverty in which they live. There is so much heart here—devoted, honorable characters who do what’s necessary to survive. The descriptions and the settings soar off the pages. Read Dog Bone Soup and you’ll know what it feels like to go flying down a hill on your bicycle, hike to the creek to catch fish for dinner, or turn in empty bottles for penny candy. I devoured this book in two nights. Pick it up once and it’s extremely hard to put down. Highly recommended!

It opens with Shawn Daniels as he is en route for his military training at Fort Dix. Soon he thinks back to his family and the previous ten years.
The story quickly moves to his family's chaotic dysfunctional life as a child during the 1950s & 1960s. His father is the town drunk whose violence towards Shawn's mother colours all their lives. The family not only live with this trauma but also exist in dire poverty and from a young age Shawn is enrolled to helping with chores around the home. However, at the same time Shawn and his brother Willie have plenty of time to engage in typical exciting childhood escapades. The happy carefree life is strongly contrasted with their severe home circumstances. So desperate that weeks at a time the family are reduced to eating soup made from bones only fit for dogs - hence the title of the book.
As the family falls deeper into a life of drudgery the so called American Dream era passes them by. Shawn's education is affected as his time is increasingly used to help his mother scour for food and work. His mother remains a strong powerful woman in her own right throughout, always seeking out to do the best she can.
The novel covers ten years seamlessly as the narrative is fluid and effective. Shawn's matures from a young boy to a strong man making decisions for himself and his family.
Bette has brilliantly recreated the life of Shawn of the 50s & 60s America. The detail is meticulous and I was immediately transported to the era; it has a cinematic-feel. The author has also captured the vernacular of the time perfectly. The touching novel is well crafted and I was hooked from the start. I cannot recommend this book highly enough - it will stay with you long after you finish it. My only regret is that I long for a sequel. Any chance, Bette? What happens to Shawn afterwards? To his mother? Brother? Sister Annie? I just did not want to leave my new friends.

The story is told from Shawn's POV, he is bullied and teased all through school because they are poor and their father is a known drunk. The ramshackle home they live in has no running water, cooking or heating; the home also requires firewood. Shawn learned early in life how to fish, chop wood, and bring in water from the stream for washing and cooking. He also witnessed his father striking and beating their mother but was too afraid to get involved. To escape the wrath, the kids would run off and seek out new adventures to entertain themselves. Shawn is a hard worker who takes on odd jobs to help put food on the table. The title of this book is the name of a soup the family eats for days on end (boiled dog bones, onions, carrots, and potatoes).
When Shawn is of age, he wants to make a life for himself and pursues joining the military...this is just as the war in Vietnam is beginning. His uncle tries to talk him out of it because of the horrors he'll witness, confidentially sharing why his father drinks - to forget about the horrors of war that he fought in.
This is a tale of a mother's love & and sacrifice and the coming-of-age story of a young boy in a small town. The story flowed well but I did encounter typos and missing words throughout the book. If you think you have it bad, you should read this story to see how those who do have it bad can cope, dream, and hope for a better life. I gave this story four stars.
