John Reynolds Gardiner, Author
- Bio: 1944-2006; born in Los Angeles, California; known as a rebellious boy whose teachers believed he would never get anywhere in life; earned master’s degree from University of California, Los Angeles; worked as an engineer; ran Num Num Novelties, a novelty store; lived in West Germany, El Salvador, Mexico, Italy, Ireland, and Idaho; his first book, Stone Fox, has sold over four million copies and was adapted into a feature film
- Other Works: Top Secret (1984); General Butterfingers (1986); How to Live a Life That’s Not Boring (2004)
- Awards: New York Times Outstanding Book (1980); Maud Hart Lovelace Book Award (Minnesota, 1980); Utah Beehive Award (1985)
CENTRAL THEMES connected and noted throughout this Teaching Unit:
- Sacrifice as Declarations of Devotion
- Society’s Failure to Care for People in Need
- Perseverance and Kindness as Vital Tenets of Success
STUDY OBJECTIVES: In accomplishing the components of this Unit, students will:
- Develop an understanding of the social and cultural contexts regarding financial hardship that incite Little Willy’s conflict.
- Analyze paired texts and other resources to make connections via the text’s themes of Devotion, People in Need, and Perseverance and Kindness.
- Plan and construct visual media to help Little Willy save his farm based on novel details.
- Analyze and evaluate the plot and character details to draw conclusions in structured essay responses regarding the novel’s title, Willy’s grandfather, and other topics.