
Stella
McCall Hoyle
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Description
Ever since she was a puppy, Stella was trained to use her powerful beagle nose to sniff out dangerous chemicals and help her handler keep people safe. But during a routine security inspection, Stella misses the scent of an explosive. The sound of the blast is loud and scary. Unable to go back to work because of her anxiety, Stella is retired as a working dog.
When a young girl named Cloe wants to adopt Stella, the beagle knows this is her last chance to prove her worth. But how? When Stella smells a strange chemical inside Cloe's body, a scent that surges just before the girl has a seizure, Stella's nose makes the connection. But how can Stella warn her new family without them thinking she's having an anxiety attack? How can she convince others that she can be a new kind of service dog and hopefully save Cloe's life?
Even dogs deserve a second chance.
Product Details
Publisher | Shadow Mountain |
Publish Date | March 02, 2021 |
Pages | 176 |
Language | English |
Type | |
EAN/UPC | 9781629729015 |
Dimensions | 8.4 X 5.6 X 0.9 inches | 0.7 pounds |
About the Author
When McCall isn't writing or teaching, you will probably find her with one of her four-legged friends training for agility, obedience, or dock diving. If she's feeling spontaneous or needs a change of scenery, you might find her and a furry companion chasing make-believe bunnies at a lure coursing event or even hunting rats in a straw-filled barn in the foothills of the North Georgia Mountains she calls home. You can learn more about her at mccallhoyle.com.
Reviews
2023-2024 MCBA nominee-- "Massachusetts State Award"
2022-2023 Honor Book-- "Nebraska Golden Sower"
"Heartwarming. It could quite possibly inspire us humans to be a little less judgmental, quicker to forgive, and more generous with our love. The author has done an incredible job giving us insight into the hear and mind of Stella. She's smart, kind, and loyal. Many excellent themes throughout this story. There are a few gripping and heart-pounding spots throughout the story, but the author, McCall Hoyle, has done a superior job keeping her young readers in mind as she describes these scenes. Fast-paced from the start, the author's ability to open the hearts of Stella and Chloe for the readers makes this story addicting and a thoroughly enjoyable read!"-- "Compass Book Rating"
2023-24 State Award nominee
-- "South Carolina State Award"
2022-2023 for Grades 3-5-- "FL Sunshine State Young Readers Award nominee"
2022-2023 master list nominee-- "Texas Bluebonnet Award"
2022-2023 master list-- "PA Young Readers Choice List nominee"
2022-2023 nomiee-- "Pennsylvania Keystone to Reading Elementary Book Award"
2022-2023 nominee-- "Kentucky Bluegrass Award"
2022-2023 nominee-- "Maine Student Book Award"
2022-2023 nominee-- "New Mexico Land of Enchantment Book Award"
2022-23 master list for Grades 4-5-- "AL Children's Choice Camellia Award nomination"
2023-2024 for Grades 3-5-- "Louisiana Readers' Choice (LYRC/LTRC) Awards nominee"
2023-2024 nomination for Grades 3-5-- "KS William Allen White Children's Book Award master list nomination"
"Endearing. Tender exploration of human-animal bonding. The book's suspenseful final third focuses on Cloe's interactions with bullies, forcing Stella to relive her own traumatic memories, and to act brave despite them. This is a circular but satisfying means for Stella to resolve her fears. Stella realizes that it is okay to have made mistakes in the past, and that love doesn't require working for approval...In the memorable novel Stella, a dog looks to heal--and find a home."-- "Foreword Reviews"
"This tender novel from a dog's perspective will help readers understand the importance of animals in their lives. This empathetic read is also full of important themes and lessons for young readers--bravery, how to overcome fears, and that mistakes don't have to define us. A heartfelt dog story that readers young and old will enjoy."-- "School Library Journal"
"A traumatized working dog has one last chance after the death of her handler.
Stella, a bomb-sniffing beagle, has been in three foster homes since the death of her handler, Connie, in an explosion. Now she's got PTSD, and she panics at loud noises, fire, or being left alone. Unable to do anything for her, the humans plan to euthanize Stella until she receives a last-minute reprieve. An old friend of Connie's, a world-class dog trainer, decides to take on Stella's rehabilitation as a favor to her old friend. Through Stella's doggy point of view (usually, though not entirely, limited to what a dog could theoretically comprehend), readers are introduced to dog training with Esperanza and her 11-year-old daughter, Cloe. Esperanza and Cloe, who come from a Spanish-speaking family background, live in the country with other working dogs, a cat, and sheep. Perhaps in this rural environment Stella can finally recover. As her bond with Cloe grows, Stella learns more about what Cloe's sometimes-strange smells mean when she first witnesses Cloe have an epileptic seizure. Stella's narration duly reports all the human conversations she doesn't understand; combined with Stella's somewhat anthropomorphized trauma recovery, Cloe's hopes and fears come through clearly. There's plenty of training process to please lovers of realistic dog books.
Dog training, trauma recovery, and just enough urgency to keep it moving: a quiet pleasure."
-- "Kirkus"Earn by promoting books