Uncle Shamus

Published
Apr 1992
Main Genre
General Fiction General Fiction
Pages
132

About This Book

Gr 4-6-- After spotting smoke coming from the chimney of a vacant Shanty Town shack, Akers Johnson soon makes friends with the old, blind, black man known as Uncle Shamus, who recently moved there. Along with ten-year-old Marleena, another resident of this poor Oklahoma town, Akers runs errands for the man, an ex-convict who served 30 years for the robbery of an armored car. Marleena and Akers form a tenuous friendship and eventually become involved in Shamus's elaborate plot to recover the stolen cash and fool an ex-prison guard who is demanding a share. Duffy's descriptions of the poverty of Shanty Town are conveyed well, but the starkness of the setting diminishes the emotional level of the story. The villains's threats seem to be annoyances rather than real danger, and despite losing his sight and a close friend during three decades in prison, Shamus appears surprisingly unaffected by the experience. Although there are some observations about the changes that have occurred during his absence, the time period is nondescript. Akers has a momentary flicker of conscience before digging up the money, but all turns out well (and a bit too neatly) when Shamus returns it and decides he'd rather live in the poor Shanty Town with his young friends than enjoy his riches in a big city. Although the conspirators' actions may be fun to watch, and Shamus's gift of $8000 to each child a dream come true, the novel is more than half over before Shamus's full background and plans are revealed. It will require patient readers who arewilling to stick with the story as it unfolds. --Susan Knorr, Milwaukee Public Library

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First Edition Apr 1992 Simon & Schuster ISBN 0684194341
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