Compelling historical fiction, this is also a powerful story about the bond between dogs and humans, fathers and daughters. The imagery creates a vivid sense of time and place. Birth and fight scenes are handled realistically and factually. Lara bravely steps forward to fight for her dreams in an era in which women were seen as fit only to be wives and mothers, seamstresses and midwives. The story develops beautifully from Lara's saving Zar and moves swiftly through the conflicts between Lara and her father as well as the confrontations between Zar and the wolves. She knows that Zar, the runt she saved from death despite her father's disapproval, has an important part to play in hunting the wolves that plague the estate if only her father would give him a chance. But visions regarding the dogs still come to her despite her father's demand that she stop them. Then her baby brother is born, and she is devastated when her father determines that she will marry instead. Training and caring for the animals alongside her father, she dreams of following him as kennel steward. Gr 5-8–Lara Ivanova Bogdanova loves the borzoi, the dogs her father breeds on the Count's estate in imperial Russia.
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