Review:
"Scout's Honor is at the same time a hilarious outdoor odyssey, a moving glimpse of a father's heart, and the best commentary ever on the Boy Scouts and their touchingly awkward history. When I was a Scout, the ultimate approbation for a job well done was something called "Three and a Half Hows." So here's to you, Peter Applebome: How! How! How! Hhhhh!" -- Stephen Harrigan, author of The Gates of the Alamo
PRAISE FOR SCOUT'S HONOR
"He accomplishes everything except tying knots and conveys his experiences with self-deprecating humor, giving a balanced and informed account. . . . Lively and light-hearted."
--THE NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW
"An affectionate and often amusing account of Applebome's adventures with Troop 1--one part Braveheart and one part Lord of the Flies."--THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR
"Give Applebome a merit badge for wit."--PEOPLE
PRAISE FOR SCOUT S HONOR
He accomplishes everything except tying knots and conveys his experiences with self-deprecating humor, giving a balanced and informed account. . . . Lively and light-hearted.
THE NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW
An affectionate and often amusing account of Applebome s adventures with Troop 1 one part Braveheart and one part Lord of the Flies. THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR
Give Applebome a merit badge for wit. PEOPLE
"
PRAISE FOR SCOUT S HONOR
He accomplishes everything except tying knots and conveys his experiences with self-deprecating humor, giving a balanced and informed account. . . . Lively and light-hearted.
THE NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW
An affectionate and often amusing account of Applebome s adventures with Troop 1 one part Braveheart and one part Lord of the Flies. THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR
Give Applebome a merit badge for wit. PEOPLE
"
From the Back Cover:
"He accomplishes everything except tying knots and conveys his experiences with self-deprecating humor, giving a balanced and informed account....lively and light-hearted."
- The New York Times Book Review
"Charming . . . Applebome joins with his son and finds the old-school group can still bring dads and kids closer to nature and to each other, even while impaling a canoe on river rocks." - US News and World Report
As someone who had never made a fire except in a gas grill, Peter Applebome was an unlikely recruit for the Boy Scouts. Still, when his son, Ben, declared a preference for hiking and camping above Little League, Applebome reluctantly followed Ben into the local troop - and hiked the trail from tenderfoot skeptic to proud Scout dad. Offering affectionate portraits of the motley group of boys in the troop, he also laces his narrative with an informal but fascinating history of Scouting and grapples with the modern-day controversies that will help determine Scouting's future.
"Brave, clean and not too reverent."-- Roy Blount Jr.
PETER APPLEBOME is a writer and editor for the New York Times, and served as bureau chief in both Houston and Atlanta. He lives in Chappaqua, New York.
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