"We drove for a hundred hours past a lake called Superior. It was as big
as the ocean."
Sadie is bold in her description of the view outside her car window, but
as her family sets off on a wilderness adventure, she's not entirely
sure she's ready to spend some quality time in the woods. Aren't there
bears? And alligators? What if it starts to rain?
Sadie's younger brother, Benjamin, doesn't always know to be afraid, but
big sister keeps an eye out for him and enumerates his concerns--which
are really her own. The north woods comes alive in her imagination as
she battles "monster boulders" and "growling waterfalls" and "flying
dinosaurs." Sadie's spunky approach turns away these fierce foes as she
and her family swim in quiet pools, hike twisting forest trails, and
launch their canoe on a skinny lake. On the last day, a storm blows in,
and Sadie is brave for Benjamin as the wind whips branches and rain
beats on the lake--and her own fear disappears. In the end, there are a
hundred new little rivers to play in. And Sadie just may be a convert to
the appeal of exploring the wilderness.