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Gather

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A resourceful teenager in rural Vermont struggles to hold on to the family home while his mom recovers from addiction in this striking debut novel.

Ian Gray isn’t supposed to have a dog, but a lot of things that shouldn’t happen end up happening anyway. And Gather, Ian’s adopted pup, is good company now that Ian has to quit the basketball team, find a job, and take care of his mom as she tries to overcome her opioid addiction. Despite the obstacles thrown their way, Ian is determined to keep his family afloat no matter what it takes. And for a little while, things are looking Ian makes friends, and his fondness for the outdoors and for fixing things lands him work helping neighbors. But an unforeseen tragedy results in Ian and his dog taking off on the run, trying to evade a future that would mean leaving their house and their land. Even if the community comes together to help him, would Ian and Gather have a home to return to?

Told in a wry, cautious first-person voice that meanders like a dog circling to be sure it’s safe to lie down, Kenneth M. Cadow’s resonant debut brings an emotional and ultimately hopeful story of one teen’s resilience in the face of unthinkable hardships.

337 pages, Kindle Edition

First published October 3, 2023

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2,514 people want to read

About the author

Kenneth M. Cadow

2books24followers
Kenneth M. Cadow is an art teacher. He lives in Norwich, Vermont. This is his first picture book.

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5 stars
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 367 reviews
Profile Image for Erin.
1,307 reviews
January 13, 2024
The dog lives, don’t worry. Demon Copperhead lite.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Jennifer Mangler.
1,581 reviews24 followers
December 20, 2023
This book made me take my time. I'm usually a fast reader, but I couldn't be with this book. Cadow made me slow down. Gather is a lovely book that simultaneously broke my heart and filled it so full that I walked away happy.
Profile Image for Tori.
760 reviews15 followers
January 29, 2024
Things to know about this book:
1. It does a great job or recognizing rural teens and the ways in which the US education system fails them.
2. The dog doesn't die.
3. The title is so fun to think about once you finish the book. It relates to SO many different parts of the story.
Profile Image for Stacy Wolfe.
690 reviews4 followers
February 13, 2024
I do not understand why this book only has 300some ratings. First, the dog doesn’t die and nothing bad happens to him, so let’s get that out in the open right away. I picked up this book looking for a way to add something more current to my 10th grade curriculum. Wow. Wow. Wow. I know this child is different facets of my low level students who are coming to school with rural issues. They’ve worked before school. They are hungry. They are dealing with all forms of addiction in their houses. They are living with grandparents. They are too proud to ask for help or accept it. They are my farmers, hunters, and fixers. I KNOW Ian. He is a real person to me, and his story is worth reading because its insight into the world many kids deal with and then try to come to school and wonder why they can’t learn and what we teach them is totally useless to them. Their world is about survival, not onomatopoeia, not mitosis. Two more quick things: I found it suuuuper interesting that John Taylor Gatto was quoted at the start of this book, because although he’s kind of crazy, he’s right that in many ways teachers fail their kids. Never intentionally, but the system is built to support a certain kind of kid and if you aren’t that…good luck. Also, this is just my adult perspective. My 12yo started reading it…I took it before she finished, she tracked me down to get it back. I asked her why she liked the book and her response - because it’s real.
I think that’s all you really need to know.
4 reviews
January 9, 2024
This book was heartbreaking and beautiful. I had to explain why I was crying in the dentist waiting room.
Profile Image for Meg.
749 reviews27 followers
December 20, 2023
Outstanding, excellent, essential, this book about a young man set in rural Vermont is on the short list for the National Book Award for Young Adult Literature.

I will be in conversation with the author at Bear Pond Books at an event on Friday evening, January 19. A more detailed review is forthcoming!
Profile Image for Sydney | sydneys.books.
839 reviews145 followers
March 8, 2024
If ŷ was more like Letterboxd I’d just put: Leave it to a lesbian to save the day.

But this story deserves more than just a quip that oversimplifies the heavy and the heart. So when it’s not 4am and I’ve stopped typing this through tears, I’ll be back to write the actual review.

ALSO THE DOG IS FINE THE WHOLE BOOK DO NOT WORRY!

TW: death of a parent (overdose, on-page); parent recovering from opioid addiction; absent father; severe poverty; mentions of vomit

I initially read this for a post idea (you should totally , just saying) where I read all the National Book Award Young People's Literature finalists and then choose the one I think should have won. And I have only read one of them (this one obviously) AND IT SHOULD HAVE WON!!! I said what I said. Good luck other books on the list. The bar is in outer space.

This book is a survivalist story, in more ways than one. And it's a story about grief. There's a lovely dog and boy relationship. Always hold the door open for people. Hug your mom. There's some levity, but it's a heavier read. God bless teachers. I want to give the main character a hug. Never road trip in a truck.

I don't want to say anything else because it's really best to go in without knowing much, but this book is like Noah Kahan's Stick Season. Also, I read with the author when I was about 20% in and it shifted how I viewed the book. I sobbed my eyes out in multiple points, but including the acknowledgements and author's note, specifically because I knew the layers between his personal life and the fictional universe in the pages.

I'm very glad I picked this up without knowing anything, and I do not regret how awful I felt after that very late night. My eyes were so swollen in the morning I could barely see my work computer. I'm clearly getting old if 5 hours of sleep and some extensive crying made me feel like garbage for two days.

This story won't be forgotten any time soon.
Profile Image for Katy O..
2,821 reviews707 followers
October 26, 2024
Winner of the 2024 Kirkus Prize. Absolutely beautiful and an excellent YA (MS & HS) read alike for Demon Copperhead by Barbara Kingsolver. The VOICE in this book is stunning.

Source: public library hardcover
Profile Image for Audrey.
1,620 reviews
March 19, 2024
This story ebbs and flows. Truthfully, it ebbs much more than it flows. The characters were interesting but other than the protagonist, not fleshed out.
Profile Image for Nyambura.
295 reviews32 followers
Currently reading
October 18, 2023
18/10/23: Bailing on this because I know it's going to be heartbreaking (made the mistake of reading a review with spoilers) and I don't have it in me do deal with it.
Profile Image for Rebecca McPhedran.
1,403 reviews81 followers
June 9, 2024
A NorthStar YA nominee for 24|25.

A beautiful story about young Ian; no longer a boy, but not quite a man. His world is his land and his farm. He lives there with his mom; who has a drug problem. Their life is full of struggles, and when Ian finds a dog on his property, it seems that the dog is one more problem. Gather ends up becoming Ian’s best friend, and he helps him through his darkest times.

This book is for the kids who struggle in traditional school. The kids who love to be outdoors and work with their hands. It’s full of heart and heartbreak. I think so far, it is my favorite of this year’s list.
Profile Image for Colleen.
257 reviews6 followers
Read
July 25, 2024
A unique voice and story structure. This book was suggested to me as a great book for my male students, especially those who prefer working with their hands to being in school. With this in mind, I struggled to get invested in this story because I was so distracted thinking about how this book would likely not engage that population of students. I could be wrong, but unless you are a strong reader, the structure of this narrative—lots of back flashes, lots of tangents, and lots of pieces of info you need to hold on to for later in the story—is challenging to follow. I think reluctant readers will get frustrated. The MC’s life experiences closely mirror those of my students, but I’m just not sure they’ll be able to get engaged in this novel. I hope I’m wrong because I found a lot to love in the last quarter.
Profile Image for Ms. B.
3,749 reviews65 followers
January 7, 2024
A lot happens in a year in the life of Ian, a young high school boy who mostly fends for himself to survive. How wary should he be of others in his small town community when they offer employment to him in times of need? Can he trust them, could a little help from them improve his look on life? Will others understand the special bond he has with a stray dog that he names Gather?
Perfect for fans of stories like Gary D. Schmidt's or Peter Brown's or other stories with rural or farm settings.
Profile Image for Bailey.
173 reviews9 followers
September 1, 2024
This story was so visceral and gut wrenching, but the best part was how engaging and believable the voice of the main character was. It was the first book in a while that actually made me weep as I was reading. It also made me feel like a middle class fraud for not having all of the practical, hands-on skills this teenager had been developing since childhood. Would recommend to readers who enjoy strong coming-of-age stories, wilderness/survival stories, or stories with super likable protagonists.
Profile Image for Dorothy Minor.
767 reviews13 followers
November 10, 2024
Since I am an eclectic reader, I look for books for all ages. Recently, I discovered Gather by Kenneth M. Cadow, a book for readers 14 � 17. I also lead a book club on Zoom that is comprised of adults, some of whom are educators or retired educators. Others have children or grandchildren who could benefit from and enjoy reading Gather. A reviewer for Booklist calls Gather, “arguably one of the finest novels of the year.� I decided to see for myself.

Gather is a dog who wanders up to Ian Henry’s home. Ian is a teenager who faces many challenges daily including a mother who has fallen into drug use, an absent father, and little money for food, cothing, and other necessities. Ian’s full name is Dorian Gray, but he perfers to forget his full name and go by Ian. He has not read The Picture of Dorian Gray and has only a vague knowledge of its contents.

Ian is determined to keep Gather despite knowing that his mother will likely want him to get rid of the dog. There’s also the problem of feeding Gather since finding food for Ian and his mother remains a problem. Still, Gather represents one of the only bright spots in Ian’s life.

Thankfully, Ian’s mom works to kick her addiction. Ian decides to quit the basketball team and look for a job. While both Ian and his mom move in the right direction, obstacles continue to make their paths difficult. Ian is resourceful, and he is determined to make things better for his mom, him, and Gather. He also wants to hang on to the twelve acres he has left of his family’s farm. The odds are against Ian, but he continues to find ways to tackle even the most difficult problems.

Cadow tells the story in first person through Ian’s eyes and experiences. It is not a straightforward narrative because Cadow said he wanted to tell it as Ian would. That means that Ian tells what is happening in the present, but he also harkens to the past to fill in details for the readers. Cadow, a school principal, uses his experiences with youth to create Ian’s character. Ian represents many children whom Cadow has known through his work in education.

I found Gather to be completely absorbing; it kept me turning pages to see what Ian would face next and how he would conquer the challenge. Gather is a story of horrible circumstances, but Ian shows tremendous strength and resilience as he faces one challenge after the other. Holding on to Gather through these difficulties helps Ian remain hopeful. Ultimately, Gather is a story of hope, strength, spirit, friendship, and love. I highly recommend it!
Profile Image for Kate Bailey.
8 reviews1 follower
January 15, 2025
The most important thing up front: The dog is not harmed in this book! Thank goodness (and thank you Mr. Cadow). I might have initially written this book off as just another lone-boy-who-loves-the-woods coming-of-age story. The truth is that it's so much more. The story is complex in it's simplicity. It will break your heart and mend it back together. It's a community's love story to a boy and to our collective futures. Vermonters often talk a big talk about the value of community, but this book walks the walk. The characters are each real and raw and beautiful in their own ways while being representations of intersecting identities of class, education level, race, gender, and sexuality. I see why Vermonters are loving this book (shout out to the VT Humanities VT Reads program!) and I hope Ian and Gather will resonate with a broader audience as well.
Profile Image for Jessica.
323 reviews1 follower
February 19, 2025
Wow, I loved this! Like a teen version of Demon Copperhead, only with a dog in the mix too. So many wonderful observations on life I found myself wanting to highlight many sentences.
Profile Image for Aimee Clark.
283 reviews9 followers
April 30, 2024
I expected this to be a boy and his dog story, but it's not. I mean I guess it it, but it's really the story of a boy that idolized his late grandfather. His dad left. His mom hurt her back at work and she's become addicted to opioids. They live in extreme poverty. He's trying to hide all of this from the people around him to keep protective services away, and wants to keep bills paid so they don't lose the property his grandfather left him.

Great book.
Profile Image for Stephanie A..
2,719 reviews92 followers
October 14, 2024
Oh, this is outstanding YA. I'm rating it partly on my personal enjoyment, and partly because this is one of the rare times I'm hit with the pressing need to declare that this is GOOD and IMPORTANT for the target age group.

The first reason is that it's a vanishingly rare addition to the canon of post-2015 YA contemporary featuring a straight white male (I am being so serious; for a long time now male leads have been in short supply compared to girls, but as diversity within YA publishing has exploded - which is good! - it's only more noticeable that there's a pervading sense of "straight white guys have had their time." Which - to paraphrase - means little to the teen boys today who currently aren't seeing themselves represented).

Even better, unlike with John Green types, it's done without any sexual content. While there is definitely a fair bit of swearing, it's not in every other sentence and he's also constantly getting called out on that language so honestly, it feels realistic in a way that curse-happy teen authors claiming ~this is how teens really talk~ never has.

The second reason is that it's just...really well written, especially in terms of capturing the perspective of a low-income rural Vermont resident. I loved the representation of a kid who is incredibly smart in terms of practical skill, understanding mechanical repair like a breeze, in addition to deep knowledge of the forest, but doesn't see the point of a classroom because he wants to spend his life doing satisfying, hands-on work. (Why, he wonders, do farmers see so little profit from the fruit of their labors?) He is mostly allowed to be right, but there is a counterpoint voice of wisdom from his most understanding teacher, who challenges him to see that a high school education, at least, has value for everyone.

And I LOVE the dog, whose cover depiction is somehow amazingly accurate?? It's a (moderately annoying) running joke that everyone and their mother offers as a guess as to the breed(s) that went into him, but consensus seems to settle on wolfhound/mastiff, and that is certainly what I see! Gather is such a good boy, and nothing bad happens to him. Ian has a very healthy "listen, maybe I can't have everything I want, but I will not be parted from this dog and that's final" attitude, and defies anyone to challenge it.

There are some very sad elements to this book , but ultimately, it is more feel-good than not. The title carries a dual meaning as well, in that it refers to the importance of gathering a community of people and support around you -- and for all his frustrations, he finds that there are many people like that indeed, and that he's not all alone in his battles.

This book deserves every award and honor it's got.
Profile Image for Jordan Lombard.
Author1 book58 followers
October 30, 2024
Wow. This was recommended by one of my aunts who lives in Vermont. Definitely a good read I will recommend to others in the future. I've already recommended it to someone yesterday. I really like Ian's voice in this and how he tells the story. I like how real this is. I like a lot about it!
Profile Image for Allyson Bogie.
209 reviews12 followers
March 3, 2024
This was a beautiful and moving book that will be widely enjoyed across ages and experience. I’m excited to get it for our high school library and start recommending it to kids.
Profile Image for Amanda  up North.
915 reviews31 followers
February 10, 2025
The thing I appreciate and relate to most about this book is that it is believably rural.

"Your body grew from the food this land put into you, the gardens, the apples, morel mushrooms, the venison, the syrup, the beechnuts and ramps- those wild leeks that come out just before spring turkey season. All those things put the meat on my bones.
I am the woods and the field and the bass and the trout from our rivers and streams. You are what you eat, you are what you do, and everything I ever learned to do, I learned here, in my town and on our land."

Author Kenneth Cadew is a rural educator:
"In my teaching career, I have encountered dozens and dozens of stories like Ian's: kids whose spirits are threatened to be crushed by societal disregard. The kids who are able to pull through by the ingenuity of their skill set and the strength of their character, as well as the care of their larger communities, are some of the strongest people I have ever had the pleasure of meeting."

I love the jacket illustration.
The story is not as much about the dog as I'd anticipated, but he's there throughout.
It's a story that puts the reader in someone else's shoes. There's a lot of importance in that. It's also a reminder of the good people in the world. Makes me think of the Mister Rogers message: "Look for the helpers."
___________________

"The things you remember. It makes a mess inside of you. "

"It feels pretty good when the right people fall in love with your dog."

"You just wonder what stories people come up with in their heads about the other people in their lives, trying to fill in the parts they don't know."

"More and more of what people think comes to them through some tiny screen instead of a person's own natural senses."

"Thinking about it all a whole lot later, Mr. Collins offering my big wet dog to go in his brand-new tiny little truck, there's a lot of good people in the world."
Profile Image for Mimi.
2,149 reviews29 followers
April 14, 2024
A rural setting in America: A boy, a dog, his farm, his family, his education, his dream. And then reality sets in. Narrated in the first person by Ian, Gather is a story of resourcefulness, resilience, and determination. There's humor, friendship, family ties, teachers, community, and grief. It's heartwarming and heartbreaking. I read it in one day, unable to put the book down and finding myself indulging in both a good cry and a big smile. The title Gather refers to so much more than just the name of Ian's dog: among other things, the people who gather around and support Ian in times of difficulty and times of grief. A novel well-deserving of being a National Book Award finalist for 2024. Highly recommended.
Profile Image for Victor The Reader.
1,702 reviews17 followers
May 30, 2024
“Gather� is definitely more than a boy-and-dog story than you’d think. We follow Ian, a teen living in rural Vermont, living with a drug-addict mom and no-nonsense grandfather while helping the family get by during their tough times. He ends up adopting a pup that he’ll grow a deep bond with while his home life will continue to face shocking obstacles.

A very harsh but emotional story that’s part dog story and part family drama. It’s certainly not like “Pax� or “Red Ferns�. It has a more down-to-earth feel as we see Ian trying to keep his life safe while having his dog to comfort him. A bittersweet yet enthralling story of teen-hood, family and man’s best friend. A (100%/Outstanding)
Profile Image for Clay.
Author12 books112 followers
October 4, 2023
Thank you National Book Award Committee for longlisting and now shortlisting this beautifully written, wise, wrenching, and, yes, joyous novel--otherwise I might have missed it. Tonally reminiscent of Ken Haruf's wonderful Plainsong, it gathered me right in.

My choice for the 2023 Michael J Printz Award (by a mile) and Highly Recommended.

Would make a marvelous audio, hint, hint.
Profile Image for Tracy Shouse.
192 reviews7 followers
February 5, 2024
I love the voice of Ian as he tells his story. My heart melted as he shared stories about his grandfather and how much he impacted Ian’s life. Many students will identify with the role grandparents play in their own lives. There is so many directions one can go in pinpointing a theme for this book. I love that you can't just pick one and that gives it a lot of power for discussions.
Profile Image for Marion.
326 reviews
January 15, 2024
The book wasn't what I imagined at first. Then it got better as what I imagined came to life with the author's way with words. What a touching novel.
Profile Image for Genesee Rickel.
688 reviews50 followers
Shelved as 'readers-advisory'
July 10, 2024
"This book follows the story of Ian (really Dorian Gray) as a resourceful teenager in rural
Vermont who struggles to hold on the family home in extreme poverty while his mother
recovers from addiction, the [irst chapter literally has needles and puke and neglect in a
way that breaks your heart. But then it also has hope, and a loyal dog, and a [irst-person
narration that brings you in because of the sheer determination of Ian and eventually the
care of his community. Obstacles are constantly thrown in his way, whether it be nature and
living in the backwoods of a small town in Vermont, or the very real adversity of taxes on a
house and making enough money to eat and pay for gas. The author has either experienced
poverty himself or did a TON of research. This book is written in a voice that we rarely hear
from, a rural boy who likes to work with his hands and has a strong moral code but never
veers toward preachy. There is an unforeseen tragedy, just when you think things are going
well. A manhunt, teachers and adults showing up for a kid in the best ways possible, and
ultimately the title (and the name of the dog) is a metaphor for the experience of living in
this book. The best way to describe this book is that you have to slow down and read, the
writing itself doesn’t let you hurry. This book will stay with me forever. Five out of [ive stars,
and six out of [ive stars if you have a community that hunts, and you are looking for a book
that will resonate with your readers." - WashRag-145-05-24
Profile Image for Charlotte.
113 reviews4 followers
February 7, 2025
I read this book because it is the Vermont Reads book for 2024-25 and I got a free copy from my library. Shoutout Morristown Centennial! I'll definitely keep my eyes peeled for any related events they have this spring/summer. Idk if I've ever read a book set in VT (and the secret history doesn't count lol) so the settings all felt really familiar.

This book was a solid teenage boy coming of age story told in the tradition of Catcher in the Rye and The Outsiders, though I thought the beginning was too long and the end was too short. As an adopted Vermonter I recognized and appreciated a lot of themes even when they hit close to home, like the effects of the decline of generational farming, opioid addiction, and land stewardship. Ian struggled a lot with his connection to the land that had been in his family for hundreds of years but can get bought out from under you at a moment's notice. It took a couple hundred pages for this book to really get going but I thought the climax was good. It was just a very masculine story for my taste lol but I can definitely see 16 year old boys connecting with this.

My favorite quote that seemed eerily applicable to the last couple weeks: "John said people haven't found any form of government where the people who rose to the top couldn't find some way to justify the greed of the people that helped get them there." I wrote "Elon" in the margins.
Profile Image for Jessica.
81 reviews
July 29, 2024
4.5⭐️

I think I added this one to Libby on a Washington County Librarian email recommendation?

Loved it! Could have finished it in 2 days, but we were at the lake and this book was Heavy with a capital H. (No tragedies involving Gather, the dog)

I loved the stream of consciousness style that the book is written in, and Ian! Poor poor Ian! Who is just a teenage boy, trying to eke out a life doing the best he can, every day. With some pretty shitty circumstances.

“Told in a wry, cautious first-person voice, that meanders like a dog circling to be sure it’s safe to lie down� .. this description is accurate.. the style of storytelling is “oh I forgot to tell you about that? Here’s what happened…� in the middle of another story (which I usually hate) but in this story I loved it!!
Displaying 1 - 30 of 367 reviews

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