
Description
Kid on the Go! is Neill McKee's third work of creative nonfiction. It's a standalone prequel to his award-winning Finding Myself in Borneo. In this new book, McKee takes readers on a journey through his childhood, adolescence, and teenage years from the mid-40s to the mid-60s, in the small, then industrially-polluted town of Elmira, Ontario, Canada-one of the centers of production for Agent Orange during the Vietnam War. McKee's vivid descriptions, dialog, and self-drawn illustrations are a study of how a young boy learned to play and work, fish and hunt, avoid dangers, cope with death, deal with bullies, and to build or restore "escape" vehicles. You may laugh out loud as the author recalls his exploding hormones, attraction to girls, rebellion against authority, and survival of 1960s' "rock & roll" culture-emerging on the other side as a youth leader. After leaving Elmira, McKee describes his intensely searching university years, trying to decide which career path to follow. Except for a revealing postscript, the story ends when he accepts a volunteer teaching position on the island of Borneo, in Southeast Asia.
Product Details
Publisher | Nbfs Creations LLC |
Publish Date | August 16, 2021 |
Pages | 290 |
Language | English |
Type | |
EAN/UPC | 9781732945753 |
Dimensions | 8.5 X 5.5 X 0.6 inches | 0.7 pounds |
About the Author
Reviews
Kid on the Go! is an honest, engaging, and sometimes humorous story that contains just the right amount of detail. It's a thought-provoking memoir of childhood and youth that drew me right in. McKee is an expert storyteller with a great sense of humor. - Crystal Otto, book blogger and reviewer, Reedsville, Wisconsin, USA
In Kid on the Go!, the author takes us back to his childhood where he discovers the strange features of his hometown of Elmira, Ontario, Canada. Enriched with details, including clever artwork by the author himself, along with family photographs, this memoir is both funny and insightful, clever and thought-provoking. -Nicole Pyles, writer, Portland, Oregon, USA worldofmyimagination.com
In Kid on the Go!, Neill McKee gives us well-told accounts of the pollution in the town, but tells humorous stories about his family, his teachers, his adolescent misadventures, his encounters with the 1960s counterculture, and his developing intellectual interests. - Bill Exley, retired English teacher, London, Ontario, Canada
I think this memoir is more than about venturing out in a geographical sense. It is about seeking new experiences, venturing out in a social sense, forming and valuing relationships with the stranger, the marginalized, and those who think differently. - Bruce Williamson, also now a senior "kid on the go," Port Hope, Ontario, Canada
Neill McKee has the ability to explain life's experiences in a way I can easily relate to. When I read about McKee's early adventures, I experienced a lot of reborn fun, joy, and memories of the projects my friends and I created with nothing but imagination and inspiration. - Charles Mann Rolison, retired, Albuquerque, New Mexico, USA
While this saga is an amusing trip down memory lane, it is also an intense drama of an unfolding life. In the last chapters and the postscript, we learn about the factors that led the author to an international career, traveling to Africa, Asia, Latin America, the Caribbean, and living in seven diverse countries. -Ken Frey Ed. D., retired management consultant, Milton, Ontario, Canada
Kid on the Go! does an impressive thing, it uses naive illustrations to tell an ever-evolving story of growth and maturation. Neill McKee covers his early life in approachable prose and conversational storytelling. The illustrations that accompany these anecdotes are similarly plucky, sketchy, and approachable. That juxtaposition is really captivating. -Dav Yendler, illustrator, Los Angeles, California, USA www.davyendler.com
People who grew up in small town North America in the 40s, 50s and early 60s, when kids had freedom to roam the countryside, exploring its side roads, creeks, rivers, and woods, will find themselves snickering and laughing out loud as memories of their own youth pour forth. -Gwenda McCurdy, avid reader, Brampton Ontario, Canada
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