Night of the Howling Dogs

Graham Salisbury

Publisher: Laurel Leaf (Mar 24, 2009)
List Price: $6.50

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Product Description
DYLAN'S SCOUT TROOP goes camping in Halape, a remote spot below the volcano on the Big Island of Hawaii. The only thing wrong with the weekend on a beautiful, peaceful beach is Louie, a tough older boy. Louie and Dylan just can't get along.

That night an earthquake rocks the camp, and then a wave rushes in, sweeping everyone and everything before it. Dylan and Louie must team up on a dangerous rescue mission. The next hours are an amazing story of survival and the true meaning of leadership.


From the Hardcover edition.

amazon.com customer reviews (9 reviews »)

Golden Sower book list. Mar 17, 2010
We live in Nebraska and the state has Golden Sower books for kids to read. This book my daugher HATED it. She thought the print was very small and the story was not intersting.
A night of terror and heroism! Dec 17, 2009
Many years ago an airplane crashed in the Potomac River. One particular passenger became a national hero and was dubbed "The Man in the Water," for in giving his place of rescue to others, he developed hypothermia and slipped into the deathly throes of the frigid water. His body was never found. We will never forget that man.

Such selfless sacrifice and heroic effort animate one of the characters in "Night of the Howling dogs." A major, but understated, message of this young adult novel is that the heroic lives in each of us, just waiting for the opportunity to be born, at least that's the message I take from it.

But first, let's look at two prongs of back story. First, Author Graham Salisbury lives in Hawaii and often sets his novels there. This particular novel is based on a true event which happened to his cousin, who becomes the narrator of the novel. On November 29, 1975, a troop of Boy Scouts and their leaders went camping at Halape, a remote beach campground on the southern bank of the Kilauea volcano. An earthquake, measuring 7.2, hits the area during night, followed by a 300-foot tsunami that raised the sea level by 50 feet. Not everyone in the group survived.

The second prong is the honor bestowed on "Night of the Howling Dogs" by its placement on a list of 15 books in the annual Young Readers' Choice Award 2010 in Louisiana. Every year the Center for the Book, administered by the State Library of each state, compiles a list of 15 books with the goal of children in each state to read at least three books from the list. Reading three qualifies them to vote by material ballot supplied by their teachers or online. There are two divisions: one for Grades Three through Five, and Grades Six through Eight. "Night of the Howling Dogs" is on Louisiana's list for middle school grades. The point of this reading challenge is provide the opportunity for boys and girls to choose THEIR favorite book by vote, with the winner getting a special designation.

So, "Night of the Howling Dogs" is one contender, a historical novel interlaced with Hawaiian mythos. Long ago the goddess Pele was forced out of the Polynesian islands by her bad sister and came with her other brothers and sisters to this volcano, where she sometimes takes the shape of a small white dog. Dylan, the narrator both hears and sees the white dog and its companion. One of the cowboys who also happen to come to the area to fish tells the Scouts this story and that it is a sign that the volcano is about to erupt.

Another story line is that of Louis, a big brute of a boy for his age--these boys are eleven or so. Louie is native Hawaiian and shows great disrespect for the narrator. He is invited into the Scouts by a very caring leader who finds the boy living in his warehouse. Because of a pitiful home life, Louie is close to homeless.

There is no explanation for the surprise of character that can arise from horrible events, for it is Louie, the bad kid, who unfailingly becomes the heroic character. Yes, I'm giving a spoiler, but it is not the fact that he becomes the hero--it is what he does. His heroic actions in the face of absolute danger make the novel worth reading. Sociologists tell us that there is no explanation for the reason why some children can come out of dire circumstances to become successful and why some cannot succeed even from wonderful backgrounds. It is this mystery that becomes the heart of the second half of the novel.

The eruption and tsunami are frighteningly described in crashing detail. The reader almost drowns with Dylan, but then becomes part of the survival and rescue efforts. It is a thrilling--almost too thrilling-- experience.

Just as many young adult novels deal with multiple issues, so does "Night of the Howling Dogs." Author Salisbury weaves them together quite admirably. I never once had to suspend any belief. All seems possible. But then again the story is based on a true event, which is then filtered through the lens of a award-winning writer.
Looks to be GREAT! Oct 18, 2009
Read the first few chapters to my young daughters, who it appears, are a little young for this. Also, I guess at bedtime, they are just too sleepy for a chapter book. For me, this has been completely intriguing and I look forward to sitting down and reading this adventure entirely--with them or without them! Also, looks like an especially good one for kids into camping, and for boys, or girls who enjoy boy-stories. Night of the Howling Dogs
Shark Runaway Aug 10, 2009
I really enjoyed thinking about how they were going to get away from the shark. It made my heart beat really fast just like his did.
A Great Boy Read Sep 01, 2008
(SPOILER ALERT)

14-y.o. Dylan is on a trip of a life time. Not only is he going on an exciting hike and campout at the paradisial Halape Beach on the Big Island in Hawaii, he's the senior patrol leader. But Dylan also has on his hands a problem of seismic proportions: Louie Domingo, an older, taller troubled teen, all muscle and menace. Previously, the two had a happenstance run-in that was the fault of neither, but Louie had vowed he would get Dylan back. Soon enough, trouble stirs and stews. It seems only a matter of time that Louie's threats would explode into violence. Little did either boys realize that a far greater peril would come from above - and beyond. Their world is shattered when a 7.2 earthquake rocked their campground, shaking loose boulders that rained death upon them, causing a tidal wave that wiped out their idyllic beach. Struggling through crippling injuries and paralyzing fear, every troop member has to dig deep to survive the catastrophe; Dylan and Louie must band together in order to save the troop, and save themselves.

This is a great book for boys who complain they don't have anything good to read - it's GOOD alright. It has a killer cover that sets the tone. A growing sense of foreboding sets in early and carries the reader away like a tsunami. Besides the brewing danger that Louie presents, we also have the mysterious howling dogs that seemed to be following them (cleverly set off by Louie's growling dogs introduced earlier - dogs that he controlled with a single word); there's also a shark of mythical pedigree, and spine-tingling tales of intrigue told around a campfire. What makes the book even more compelling is the epilogue. It explains how the story, while fictitious, is based on true events in 1975 that Salisbury's own cousin went through, and lived to talk about. Parents, librarians, and teachers will embrace the positive values the book espouses. Finally, Salisbury's staccato writing style echoes the taciturn temperament of Louie, and will resonate with laconic boys. You don't have to be a boy scout to be captivated by this book. Highly recommended.

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