Pritzker, the work is “too much for a lady,” and Callie’s conventional parents can’t imagine sending a mere girl to veterinary college. When the hurricane brings refugees to town, including a veterinarian, Callie discovers her vocation but, says Dr. But the fuel is Callie’s growing understanding of herself as a young woman of intellect and ability in a world that isn’t ready for her. The glue that holds it together is one-year-younger brother Travis’s heartwarming search for a pet (and since he’s looking for stray-animal love in all the wrong places - an armadillo? a raccoon? baby blue jays? - it also provides some comic relief ). 9/09), this sequel is episodic, punctuated by birthdays and holidays and major events such as the September 1900 hurricane that devastated Galveston. Like The Evolution of Calpurnia Tate (rev. Kelly quickly fills readers in on essential background (only girl in the family, with six brothers Callie’s avid pursuit of nature studies with formidable Granddaddy - check) before diving in to chronicle Callie’s thirteenth year. Kelly returns to turn-of-the-last-century small-town central Texas to continue the story of nascent scientist Callie Vee.
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