Murphy, Gold Rush Dog

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by Alison Hart


  Bibliography

  Henning, Robert A, Terence Cole and Jim Walsh. Nome: City of the Golden Beaches. Anchorage: The Alaska Geographic Society, 1984.

  Jones, Preston. Empire’s Edge: American Society in Nome, Alaska, 1898–1934. Fairbanks: University of Alaska Press, 2007.

  Kunkel, Jeff, ed. Alaska Gold: Life on the New Frontier, 1898–1906. San Francisco: Scottwell Associates, 1997.

  Murphy, Claire Rudolph and Jane G. Haigh. Gold Rush Dogs. Anchorage: Alaska Northwest Books, 2001.

  Murphy, Claire Rudolph and Jane G. Haigh. Gold Rush Women. Anchorage: Alaska Northwest Books, 2003.

  For Further Reading

  DeClements, Barthe. The Bite of the Gold Bug: A Story of the Alaskan Gold Rush. New York: Viking, 1992.

  Murphy, Claire Rudolph and Jane G. Haigh. Children of the Gold Rush. Boulder, CO: Roberts Rinehart Publishers, 1999.

  Ransom, Candace. Gold in the Hills: A Tale of the Klondike Gold Rush. Renton, WA: Mirrorstone, 2008.

  About the Author

  When Alison Hart was seven years old, she wrote, illustrated, and self-published a book called The Wild Dog. Since then, she’s authored more than twenty books for young readers, including Darling, Mercy Dog of World War I; Anna’s Blizzard; Emma’s River; and the Racing to Freedom trilogy. She lives in Virginia.

  www.alisonhartbooks.com

  About the Illustrator

  Michael G. Montgomery creates illustrations for advertising, magazines and posters, and children’s books, including Darling, Mercy Dog of World War I; First Dog Fala; and Night Rabbits. He lives in Georgia with his family and two dogs.

  www.michaelgmontgomery.com

  Also in the series

  Darling, Mercy Dog of World War I

  Written by Alison Hart

  Illustrated by Michael G. Montgomery

  HC: 978-1-56145-705-2

  At home in England, Darling is the mischievous but much-loved pet of Robert and Katherine. But when the British military asks families to volunteer their dogs to help the war effort, they reluctantly send Darling off to be trained as a mercy dog. Darling travels to Belgium with the 10th Battalion Worcestershire Regiment and helps locate injured soldiers on the battlefield, despite gunfire, poisonous gases, and other dangers. She is skilled at her job, but surrounded by danger. Will she ever make it back home to England?

  “The simple narrative is detailed but never graphic... While never shying away from the tragedies of battle, Darling’s story focuses on bravery, sacrifice and devotion… Wartime adventure with plenty of heart.”

  —KIRKUS REVIEWS

  Also by Alison Hart

  Anna’s Blizzard

  HC: 978-1-56145-349-8

  Anna loves life on the Nebraska prairie where she lives with her parents and four-year-old brother in a simple sod house. She doesn’t mind helping out with chores on her family’s farm, especially when she is herding sheep with her pony. When a fierce blizzard suddenly kicks up on a mild winter day, Anna, her schoolmates, and their teacher become trapped in the one-room schoolhouse. The kerosene is gone and the wood for the stove is low. Then the wind tears away the roof and door. Anna knows they must escape before it is too late. Does she have the courage and strength to lead the others through the whiteout to safety?

  “Anna is a strong, appealing heroine, and the story is suspenseful…”

  —SCHOOL LIBRARY JOURNAL

  Emma’s River

  HC: 978-1-56145-524-9

  Emma and her mama have boarded the Sally May for a steamboat journey that will take them to St. Joseph, where Papa will be waiting. When concern over her pony lures Emma below to the main deck—a place that she has been forbidden to go—she is shocked by what she encounters. Here is a world completely different from the pampered one above with its comfortable stateroom and fine food. Livestock and poor immigrants huddle together—underfed, unclean, and exhausted. Soon Emma is making regular trips below, ferrying food to Patrick, a young stowaway who recently emigrated from Ireland. When the boiler explodes and the steamboat starts sinking, Emma fights her way through the black smoke to find her friends and family. But is it too late?

  “There’s never a dull moment...” —BOOKLIST

  THE RACING TO FREEDOM TRILOGY

  Gabriel’s Horses

  HC: 978-1-56145-398-6

  PB: 978-1-56145-528-7

  Gabriel is the son of a free black father and a slave mother, which makes him a slave as well. He loves to help his father care for the thoroughbred racehorses on Master Giles’s farm and hopes to become a famous jockey one day. But the violence of war disrupts the familiar routine of daily life on the farm. When Gabriel’s father enlists in a Colored Battalion to help the Union Army and earn enough money to purchase freedom for his wife and son, Gabriel is both proud and worried. But the absence of his father brings the arrival of a white horse trainer with harsh, cruel methods for handling horses...and people. Now it is up to Gabriel to protect the horses he loves.

  “At the core of this stirring historical novel is the question of what freedom means… The boy’s first-person, present-tense narrative brings close the thrilling horse racing—on the plantation, at the race course, and in the war—and the African American history in all its complexity.” —BOOKLIST

  Gabriel’s Triumph

  HC: 978-1-56145-410-5

  PB: 978-1-56145-547-8

  Recently freed, Gabriel is making a name for himself as a jockey. When his former master asks him to ride a powerful but unpredictable horse, in a prestigious race, Gabriel jumps at the chance to compete against some of the greatest jockeys in the business. But as soon as he begins the journey to Saratoga, he finds that high-stakes horse racing can be a nasty business—and that being freed is not the same as being free.

  Gabriel’s Journey

  HC: 978-1-56145-442-6

  PB: 978-1-56145-530-0

  Gabriel leaves behind his successful horse racing career to join his parents at Camp Nelson, where his father is a sergeant in the Fifth U.S. Colored Calvary of the Union Army. When the Calvary receives orders to join white regiments in an attack on the Virginia salt works, Gabriel surreptitiously gets ahold of a horse and a uniform and joins the troops. But being a soldier is a lot harder than he imagined. Bad, weather, rough riding, dwindling supplies, and blatant racism wear heavily on his spirit. When his father doesn’t return from battle, Gabriel must go in search of him.

  Published by

  PEACHTREE PUBLISHERS

  1700 Chattahoochee Avenue

  Atlanta, Georgia 30318-2112

  www.peachtree-online.com

  Text © 2014 by Alison Hart

  Illustrations © 2014 by Michael G. Montgomery

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—electronic, mechanical, photocopy, recording, or any other—except for brief quotations in printed reviews, without the prior permission of the publisher.

  Cover illustration rendered in oil on canvas board; interior illustrations in pencil and watercolor.

  Cover design by Nicola Simmonds Carmack

  Print book design by Melanie McMahon Ives

  The Library of Congress has cataloged the print edition as follows:

  Hart, Alison, 1950–

  Murphy, Gold Rush dog / by Alison Hart ; illustrated by Michael Montgomery.

  pages cm

  ISBN: 978-1-56145-769-4

  Summary: “In 1900, a dog named Murphy wants to help Sally and Mama build a new life in Nome, but life in the mining town is not easy. Can the three of them find a home—and maybe a fortune?”— Provided by publisher.

  1. Dogs—Juvenile fiction. [1. Dogs—Fiction. 2. Gold mines and mining—Fiction. 3. Nome (Alaska)—Gold discoveries—Fiction.] I. Montgomery, Michael, 1952– illustrator. II. Title.

  PZ10.3.H247Mu 2014

  [Fic]—dc23

  2013049354

  />   Alison Hart, Murphy, Gold Rush Dog

 

 

 


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