About This Book
The narrative is set on a steep alpine slope and contrasts two neighboring households: one tidy and orderly, the other shabby and overcrowded. Children of the poorer dwelling are unkempt and left to their own devices while a careful neighbor watches from afar. Central is a timid, undernourished boy nicknamed This, who keeps to himself and bears the household's strain as others work the fields and tend animals. Through scenes of seasonal labor, domestic difficulty, and small gestures of attention, the story examines poverty, neglect, communal judgment, and the gradual moral and personal growth that allows the boy to find dignity and a place among his neighbors.
About the Author
More Books by This Author
6 picks
You May Also Like
6 picks
Helping Himself; Or, Grant Thornton's Ambition
by Jr. Horatio Alger
Lydia of the Pines
by Honoré Morrow
Contes et historiettes à l'usage des jeunes enfants / Qui commencent à savoir lire
by Zulma Carraud
The Boy Scouts at the Canadian Border
by John Henry Goldfrap
An Elementary Study of Insects
by Leonard Haseman
The Grasshopper Stories
by Elizabeth Davis Leavitt





