Sam, Bangs & Moonshine
Evaline Ness
Hardcover
(Holt, Rinehart, and Winston, March 15, 1966)
Not, as you might think from the title, about Uncle Sam, fireworks, and illegal hootch. Instead, this book examines a girl and her inability to face up to the harsh realities of her life. A 1967 Caldecott winner, "Sam, Bangs, and Moonshine" follows Samantha (commonly known as Sam), her cat Bangs, and her extraordinary imaginings that inevitably lead to a heap of trouble. A tale that is simultaneously quiet and riveting, the multitalented Evaline Ness wrote a book that examines, in a roundabout way, how the death of a parent can change a child's very perceptions. Sam and Bangs live in a fishing community, where her father works with the other men at sea. Prone to telling tale of gross exaggeration, Sam is warned repeatedly by her father not to tell "moonshine" (as he refers to her tales and stories). One day, Sam's father encourages her to go a whole day without indulging in moonshine, and then he's off. While gone, Sam's younger friend Thomas arrives to inquire after her supposed pet of a baby kangaroo. Every day Thomas asks to see the pet, and every day Sam tells him that it just left and where Thomas can go to find it. On this particular day Sam sends the boy to a "cave behind Blue Rock". As Thomas leaves Bangs remarks (as the wise old cat was wont to do) that the tide rises early at Blue Rock that day. Sam doesn't wish to have anything to do with the matter so Bangs goes himself to find Thomas. When the rain begins to fall heavily and neither Thomas nor Bangs return, Sam gets a rude awakening as to the extent to which moonshine can harm the ones she loves. ( amazon customer)
P