book cover of Double Acting
 

Double Acting

(2015)
A Story by

 
 
Mike Saunders, an African-American boy of 13 raised by his novel writing dad in the nice suburban environment of Thousand Oaks, California, is dismayed when his father's uncertain income forces a move to a tumbledown shack in the desolate sweltering desert of Coyote Valley, Arizona. The property, such as it is -- electricity unreliable, and only a windmill for water -- was bequeathed to Mike's dad by Mike's great-uncle, who died at the age of 107 after spending most of his life searching for a ton of gold bars stolen in a train robbery in 1897 and reputedly still buried somewhere. Except for its rusty narrow-gauge track, the Coyote Valley and Codyville railroad, abandoned in 1917, has almost been forgotten. But Mike, though having an interest in steam trains, is much more concerned upon his arrival to find there's only dial-up web service, along with only two TV channels. Even worse from Mike's perspective, the only two boys within twenty miles are Carson, 12, a blond-haired "out-of-shape gamer" whose mom works at a saloon in town; and Little Coyote, 13, an enormously fat Apache boy who lives in a shack no better than Mike's at what had once been a water stop on the abandoned railroad, and whose sister cooks in a cafe. Mike isn't sure he wants to befriend either boy. But, as the story unfolds, revealing desert legend and lore, crusty old wild west characters, an adventure in an abandoned mine, a steam locomotive resurrected, and a hundred-year-old mystery solved, Mike learns that true friends come in all shapes and sizes, and souls aren't judged by BMI, or how much wealth one accumulates while breathing the air of this earth.


Genre: Young Adult Fantasy

Used availability for Jess Mowry's Double Acting


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