The co-op bookstore for avid readers
Book Cover for: Saving Samantha: A True Story, Robbyn Smith Van Frankenhuyzen

Saving Samantha: A True Story

Robbyn Smith Van Frankenhuyzen

Winner of the KIND Children's Honor Book (Kids In Nature's Defense--national association for humane and environmental education)

Illustrator Gijsbert van Frankenhuyzen and wife Robbyn team up again for another wildlife tale drawn from their encounters with the animal kingdom. Told in journal form and rendered in beautifully detailed artwork, the van Frankenhuyzens give a "day in the life" view as the fox Samantha begins her journey from injured kit to independent adult living on her own.

Always respecting the boundaries between the wild and the human ways of life and based on years of work as licensed wildlife rehabilitators, Gijsbert and Robbyn recommend readers "do not try this at home."

Saving Samantha is Gijsbert's fourteenth book with Sleeping Bear Press and second in the Hazel Ridge Farm series. He has also illustrated the best-selling The Legend of Sleeping Bear, The Legend of Leelanau, and The Edmund Fitzgerald: Song of the Bell.

Book Details

  • Publisher: Sleeping Bear Press
  • Publish Date: Mar 4th, 2004
  • Pages: 48
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 11.18in - 9.26in - 0.49in - 1.08lb
  • EAN: 9781585362202
  • Recommended age: 06-09
  • Categories: Animals - MammalsLifestyles - Farm & Ranch Life

About the Author

Frankenhuyzen, Robbyn Smith Van: -

Robbyn has dedicated much of her life to caring for animals. As a youngster she brought orphan animals home to mend and, as an adult, folks delivered them to her doorstep. Growing up as the middle child in a household with six sisters, she became the "entertainer." Her elaborate and theatrical storytelling was her way of standing out in a crowd and finding her own voice.

Her parents encouraged her to make her hobby her career, so with that in mind she attended Michigan State University and became an animal technician where she continued to care for animals. She met her illustrator husband Gijsbert van Frankenhuyzen at the clinic where she worked. Together they share a mutual love of nature.

Nature journaling is a part of their daily lives and an enjoyable way to document all the special animals that have been a part of their lives. The Hazel Ridge series introduces readers to their farm and their true animal tales.

Today, Robbyn visits schools, zoos and nature centers sharing with children and adults the value of journaling, the joy of storytelling and the importance of protecting our natural world.

Frankenhuyzen, Gijsbert Van: -

Gijsbert van Frankenhuyzen was born in the Netherlands in 1951. With his seven brothers and sisters, he grew up exploring nature and his sketch pads were filled with observations from those family outings. Always drawing as a young boy, his father encouraged Gijsbert to make art his career. After high school, he attended and graduated from the Royal Academy of Arts in Arnhem, Holland.

Gijsbert, or "Mr. Nick" as many children affectionately call him during his school visits, immigrated to the United States in 1976 and worked as Art Director for the Michigan Natural Resources Magazine for 17 years. In 1995, he illustrated his first children's book, The Legend of Sleeping Bear, finally fullfilling his dream of illustrating children's books.

Residing in Bath, Michigan, Nick and his family share their 40-acre farm with sheep, horses, dogs, cats, turkeys, rabbits, chickens, pigeons and a revolving door of orphaned and injured wild life. The family's nature journals logged 20 years of wild life rehabilitation on the farm and it is through these journals that the popular Hazel Ridge series was created. The farm, the land and the animals make great subjects for the artist to paint.

Mr. Nick travels to schools and conferences to share his passion for drawing--encouraging kids to make their hobby their career.

Praise for this book

"The author and illustrator of this picture book have lived on a 40-acre farm in Michigan since 1980, working together there to raise, rehabilitate and release orphaned and injured wildlife. Saving Samantha chronicles, in acutely observed journal entries and lush paintings, the first, extraordinary year of one young red fox's life. Samantha was discovered by the author as she was walking her dog on the farm. The tiny fox's leg was caught in a trap placed near its den. Releasing a frightened Samantha from the trap, the author takes her back to the farmhouse, realigns the broken bones in her leg and puts a cast on the leg. The fox goes into a crate in the kitchen, but soon graduates to her rescuer's lap, her first step on the way to a bigger world. During the next 12 months, Samantha learns to play and to hunt for her own food-the tyrant of the henhouse, old Igor the rooster, eventually becomes her dinner. As her absences from the farm extend to days and then weeks, the author experiences enormous satisfaction for a job well done, mixed with an inevitable sense of loss as enchanting Samantha leaves the family to start her own."
--"Globe & Mail" (April 2004)