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 Location:  Home » Books » General AAS » Black Joke  
Black Joke
Author: Farley Mowat
Publisher: Little Brown & Co (Juv)
Category: Book

Buy Used: $20.40





Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 2 reviews
Sales Rank: 2543011

Media: Hardcover

ISBN: 0316586315
EAN: 9780316586313
ASIN: 0316586315

Publication Date: June 1963
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: Excellent customer service. Order inquiries handled promptly.

Also Available In:

  • Paperback - The 'Black Joke' (Piccolo)
  • Paperback - Black Joke (Piccolo Books)
  • Unknown Binding - The Black Joke
  • Unbound - The Black Joke - Collector's Edition
  • Unbound - The Black Joke - Revised
  • Mass Market Paperback - The Black Joke
  • Hardcover - Black Joke

Similar Items:

  • No Man's River
  • The Dog Who Wouldn't Be
  • High Latitudes: An Arctic Journey
  • Bay of Spirits: A Love Story
  • Lost in the Barrens

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
The Black Joke is a rousing sea story in the tradition of the great classic pirate tales. The time is the 1930s. The loot is bootleg liquor, not pirate gold. And the ship is the “Black Joke,” the speediest, nimblest craft on the Newfoundland coast – Jonathon Spence, owner and master. An unwelcome passenger enmeshes the boat and her crew (young Peter and Kye) in danger and near destruction…until the fiercely independent people of the island of Miquelon are caught up in the fate of the “Black Joke” and the cargo aboard her.


Customer Reviews:

3 out of 5 stars Gripping boys' yarn, but grating   July 11, 2000
 15 out of 21 found this review helpful

The style of this novel has not aged well. Written in the bad old days of sex role stereotypes and thoughtless use of insensitive racial epithets (in this case "Frenchies"), I almost put this book down after a few chapters. (The book does treat the French with affection, however.) But I continued reading and it turned into a gripping boys' adventure tale, and provided a glimpse of that bizarre phenomenon, a tiny piece of France on the eastern North American coast (the islands of St. Pierre and Miquelon, off the coast of Newfoundland), and an interesting piece of history, these islands' participation in prohibition-era rum-running to the U.S. But the characters are all stock, which, I guess, is only to be expected in a boys' novel of this era, especially the two peripheral female characters. Farley Mowat is for me one of the best writers of our time, as he is not afraid to call a spade a spade when it comes to telling the truth about what is happening and has happened to northern North America in the 20th century, the unbelievable cruelty and and rape of nature and indigenous peoples. This boys' adventure story though is both interesting and irritating.


5 out of 5 stars An inventive novel of Newfoundland and St-Pierre   April 16, 2000
 19 out of 20 found this review helpful

I think what I like best about "The Black Joke," is that it introduces the reader to a little known corner of North America: Newfoundland and St-Pierre and Miquelon. The other thing I like about it is that it proves that Farley Mowat can write just about anything he sets his mind to.

With an historical background that is not negligible (nor does it matter much to the actual plot), the book Mowat has set out to write is ostensibly for children. It follows a classic "Boys Own" formula of putting the action safely into the hands of a pair of enterprising youngsters who then have to deal as well as they can with the baddies. It is really an excellent story of the sea; readers of maritime literature will love the boat that lends its name to the book, and bewail its apparent fate near the end. I suppose children will also like this book, although it seems so old-fashioned in many ways. Nevertheless, if you can convince a 12-year-old to have a look at it, you may make another convert, both to Mowat and the art of reading. Just don't forget to read it yourself!

Mowat seems to have tried an experiment with this book and I am confounded a bit to know why he didn't try and take it a bit further with other volumes. He had already written one of his Arctic stories for children, "Lost in the Barrens," by the time he wrote this one, and he subsequently wrote a sequel to it. But "The Black Joke" has to stand alone and I suppose all one can say is that, based on his output since its 1962 publication, it has nothing to do with fearing the hard work of writing. Excellent and underrated book.

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