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PAX, JOURNEY HOME

by Sara Pennypacker ; illustrated by Jon Klassen ‧ RELEASE DATE: Sept. 7, 2021

An impressive sequel.

Boy and fox follow separate paths in postwar rebuilding.

A year after Peter finds refuge with former soldier Vola, he prepares to leave to return to his childhood home. He plans to join the Junior Water Warriors, young people repurposing the machines and structures of war to reclaim reservoirs and rivers poisoned in the conflict, and then to set out on his own to live apart from others. At 13, Peter is competent and self-contained. Vola marvels at the construction of the floor of the cabin he’s built on her land, but the losses he’s sustained have left a mark. He imposes a penance on himself, reimagining the story of rescuing the orphaned kit Pax as one in which he follows his father’s counsel to kill the animal before he could form a connection. He thinks of his heart as having a stone inside it. Pax, meanwhile, has fathered three kits who claim his attention and devotion. Alternating chapters from the fox’s point of view demonstrate Pax’s care for his family—his mate, Bristle; her brother; and the three kits. Pax becomes especially attached to his daughter, who accompanies him on a journey that intersects with Peter’s and allows Peter to not only redeem his past, but imagine a future. This is a deftly nuanced look at the fragility and strength of the human heart. All the human characters read as White. Illustrations not seen.

Pub Date: Sept. 7, 2021

ISBN: 978-0-06-293034-7

Page Count: 256

Publisher: Balzer + Bray/HarperCollins

Review Posted Online: June 28, 2021

Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 15, 2021

CHILDREN'S ANIMALS | CHILDREN'S SOCIAL THEMES | CHILDREN'S SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY

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THE SCHOOL FOR GOOD AND EVIL

THE SCHOOL FOR GOOD AND EVIL

From the school for good and evil series , vol. 1.

by Soman Chainani ; illustrated by Iacopo Bruno ‧ RELEASE DATE: May 14, 2013

Rich and strange (and kitted out with an eye-catching cover), but stronger in the set pieces than the internal logic.

Chainani works an elaborate sea change akin to Gregory Maguire’s Wicked (1995), though he leaves the waters muddied.

Every four years, two children, one regarded as particularly nice and the other particularly nasty, are snatched from the village of Gavaldon by the shadowy School Master to attend the divided titular school. Those who survive to graduate become major or minor characters in fairy tales. When it happens to sweet, Disney princess–like Sophie and  her friend Agatha, plain of features, sour of disposition and low of self-esteem, they are both horrified to discover that they’ve been dropped not where they expect but at Evil and at Good respectively. Gradually—too gradually, as the author strings out hundreds of pages of Hogwarts-style pranks, classroom mishaps and competitions both academic and romantic—it becomes clear that the placement wasn’t a mistake at all. Growing into their true natures amid revelations and marked physical changes, the two spark escalating rivalry between the wings of the school. This leads up to a vicious climactic fight that sees Good and Evil repeatedly switching sides. At this point, readers are likely to feel suddenly left behind, as, thanks to summary deus ex machina resolutions, everything turns out swell(ish).

Pub Date: May 14, 2013

ISBN: 978-0-06-210489-2

Page Count: 496

Publisher: Harper/HarperCollins

Review Posted Online: Feb. 12, 2013

Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 15, 2013

CHILDREN'S SCIENCE FICTION & FANTASY | CHILDREN'S SOCIAL THEMES

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NOWHERE BOY

NOWHERE BOY

by Katherine Marsh ‧ RELEASE DATE: Aug. 7, 2018

A captivating book situated in present-day discourse around the refugee crisis, featuring two boys who stand by their high...

Two parallel stories, one of a Syrian boy from Aleppo fleeing war, and another of a white American boy, son of a NATO contractor, dealing with the challenges of growing up, intersect at a house in Brussels.

Ahmed lost his father while crossing the Mediterranean. Alone and broke in Europe, he takes things into his own hands to get to safety but ends up having to hide in the basement of a residential house. After months of hiding, he is discovered by Max, a boy of similar age and parallel high integrity and courage, who is experiencing his own set of troubles learning a new language, moving to a new country, and being teased at school. In an unexpected turn of events, the two boys and their new friends Farah, a Muslim Belgian girl, and Oscar, a white Belgian boy, successfully scheme for Ahmed to go to school while he remains in hiding the rest of the time. What is at stake for Ahmed is immense, and so is the risk to everyone involved. Marsh invites art and history to motivate her protagonists, drawing parallels to gentiles who protected Jews fleeing Nazi terror and citing present-day political news. This well-crafted and suspenseful novel touches on the topics of refugees and immigrant integration, terrorism, Islam, Islamophobia, and the Syrian war with sensitivity and grace.

Pub Date: Aug. 7, 2018

ISBN: 978-1-250-30757-6

Page Count: 368

Publisher: Roaring Brook Press

Review Posted Online: June 10, 2018

Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 1, 2018

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pax journey home review

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pax journey home review

Book Review

Pax, journey home.

  • Sara Pennypacker
  • Children's Fiction

pax journey home book

Readability Age Range

  • 8 to 12 years old
  • Balzer + Bray (An Imprint of Harper Collins)
  • A New York Times bestseller

Year Published

Thirteen-year-old Peter is struggling with his overwhelming feelings of loss and guilt because of the past war. Both of Peter’s parents are dead and he was forced to send away his pet fox, Pax. Meanwhile, Pax has begun a family with his mate. But when one of the young kits falls ill, Pax can only think of one solution. He must return to the human boy who once saved him.

Plot Summary

Pax is a fox. And though he may look like any other fox you might spot running through the wooded growth, he’s actually quite a bit different. Pax, you see, was once a friend of a human boy; a boy who saved him as a kit and raised him back to health. And by the time they were forced to part ways—for reasons Pax still doesn’t understand—Pax had learned that not all humans are dangerous. Some can be trusted. Some are good.

Now that Pax is a father, after finding a beloved mate named Bristle, he teaches his kits that valuable lesson, too. There are many dangers in the wild. And humans and their machines can be dangerous. But not all. Not all.

At the same time that Pax is teaching his new family and making a home at the Deserted Farm, his boy, 13-year-old Peter, is struggling mightily. The just-past war has taken so much from him. His parents are both dead. He was forced to send away his pet fox. And he was sent away too, to survive on his own since his grandfather—the only living family he has—is too bitter and distrustful to show Peter kindness. A local woman named Vola has opened her home and life to him, but it’s not the same.

Besides, Peter refuses to grow close to Vola, no matter her goodness. People and things he loves tend to die or leave. So, giving love is something Peter cannot do. He’s convinced that life is filled with too much pain to be shared. Peter’s overwhelming sense of loss and grief and guilt all make it plain what he must do.

Now that he’s stronger, Peter will join the Water Warriors for a time. This group, which analyzes and repair waterways that were poisoned during the war, will give Peter an opportunity to make his way back home. There he’ll move into the abandoned house his family used to live in. And he’ll be alone. That’s best.

Life can indeed seem filled with pain sometimes, whether you’re a boy or a fox. Pax sees that too, after his beloved little vixen kit gets sick and grows weaker and weaker. He has no way of knowing that the pond he took her to drink from was poisoned by chemicals that have killed everything that once lived in and around it. She soon begins stumbling and falling, no matter her effort.

But life can offer goodness and hope, too. When Pax catches a scent on the wind that he hasn’t smelled in a very long time, he realizes there might be a chance for his kit. It’s the smell of his boy! Surely the boy will know what to do. The boy helped him. The boy is good. But will the boy be good enough? Will he crack open his locked-down emotional protections?  Will he be able to help?

Healing comes in many forms. And two old friends desperately need the healing power of love right now.

Christian Beliefs

There’s no references to faith in God in this story, but thoughtful readers can find biblical parallels to the power of love, redemption and forgiveness in this tale.

Other Belief Systems

There are certain beliefs that the central characters are operating with here. The harsh things of war and life have left Peter with the belief that he must be strong and relationship-free if he hopes to survive. Caring about people and things only brings him pain. So, he avoids intimacy with other people and jams down memories of his family—and that includes Pax. In fact, when painful, guilt-filled thoughts of abandoning Pax bubble up, Peter creates a mental “penance” that he repeats until the feelings subside. He imagines the day he found the wounded kit, and instead of rescuing it, he takes his father’s advice and leaves the animal to die. Peter repeats this penance almost like a prayer.

On the other hand, Pax’s belief system is much more rudimentary. He knows what is dangerous, what is safe, what is bad, what is good. His beliefs are not self-deferential or self-absorbed, as a human’s might be. They just are. And that’s exactly how he communicates with his kits and those he loves. One of his strongest beliefs is an unswerving faith in Peter.

Authority Roles

Vola is a loving older woman who welcomes Peter in and with time offers to, in a sense, adopt him and give him half of what she has now—and everything when she passes. Hers is a tough love, but a sincere one that greets with open arms while not forcing anything on the struggling boy. In fact, Vola’s levelheaded and wise approach to those in her life also sways Peter’s grandfather. He’s a decidedly grumpy and recalcitrant individual who slowly comes around to understanding both Peter and Vola, and he even reaches out for a better connection with his grandson.

Samuel and Jade are a twenty-something pair of Water Warriors that Peter realizes are a couple. (They eventually marry.) He travels with them at first because he thinks their romantic feelings for each other will allow him to keep to himself. But Peter soon learns that they both are easy people to connect with. And Jade in particular has a special “secret weapon of kindness” that disarms him and draws him in. The three grow close. And during a particularly emotional moment when Peter remembers his parents, Samuel and Jade hug and comfort the emotionally shaken boy. In fact, it’s because of them that Peter begins to consider the possibility of facing and working through his past wounds.

In his own way Pax is a great illustration of what human parents should be. He thinks and communicates from his own animal perspective, but he’s willing to go to any and every extreme to protect and aid his kits—particularly his sick and near-death young vixen kit.

Profanity & Violence

No foul language or alcohol. There is, however, quite a bit of danger and peril here. Peter remembers the war that killed his father. He thinks back on his mother’s death as well. (None of those memories are visually violent, but they could still be disturbing for younger readers.) Peter also focuses on different versions of his “penance” which readers could find upsetting. And later, in an effort to protect himself emotionally, Peter picks up a rifle to kill a wounded animal (before turning from that path).

On the animal front, the foxes must be constantly wary of dangerous predators. Pax’s young daughter is snatched up by a large owl and almost taken away, but for his quick actions breaking the bird’s thigh and leg bone. Animals are threatened and burned by fires and explosions. Pax and a kit are swept over a waterfall and almost drown. And the poisonous waters, caused as an aftereffect of the war, are an ever-present danger as well. Animals are poisoned and Pax finds burrows and nests of other animals that have died from the poisons. In a very powerful sense this story is able to communicate the need for clean water and the incredible danger and deadliness of thoughtless man-made pollution.

Sexual Content

None, other than some loving fox licks.

Discussion Topics

Get free discussion questions for other books at FocusOnTheFamily.com/discuss-books .

Why do you think Peter creates his imaginary “penance” when thinking about Pax? How did he think it would help him? Compare that to Pax’s thoughts about his new kits and growing family. What do you think the book is trying to say about family?

Why do you think Peter’s grandfather was so negative and harsh to people around him? Why do you think that began to change? For that matter, Peter went through some pretty important emotional changes. What do you think caused that change?

When Pax handed his suffering kit off to Peter, what do you think he was feeling? Both Pax and Peter express grief over lost loved ones. How are they alike and different? How do you think Pax’s choice to leave his daughter affected both Pax and Peter? Are there some biblical parallels that these kinds of choices bring to mind? What is the importance of the name (Sliver) that Peter gives to Pax’s kit?

What do you think this story is saying about starting over after something bad happens?

Additional Comments

Pax, Journey Home is a sequel to the award-winning first book Pax. But it stands alone without having to read that first book if you choose. It contains some powerful messages about family, adoption, forgiveness and friendship for thoughtful young readers. And the book holds a clear positive message about environmental conservation.

You can request a review of a title you can’t find at [email protected] .

Book reviews cover the content, themes and worldviews of fiction books, not necessarily their literary merit, and equip parents to decide whether a book is appropriate for their children. The inclusion of a book’s review does not constitute an endorsement by Focus on the Family.

Reviewed by Bob Hoose

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Friday 10 September 2021

Review: pax journey home.

pax journey home review

Pax and his family have a voice. This allows us access to the strong feelings and thoughts of the animals, and fully understand the bond between humans and animals.

Title: Pax: Journey Home Author: Sara Pennypacker Illustrator: Jon Klassen Publisher: Harper Collins, $14.99 Publication Date: 7 September 2021 Format: Hardcover ISBN: 9780008470289 For ages: 9+ Type: Junior Fiction

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Pax: Journey Home by Sara Pennypacker, reviewed by Mia and Kate

pax journey home review

We received ‘Pax – Journey Home’ to review and so we read Pax first! They really need to be read in order.  Peter is a young teenager whose mum died when he when seven. He had a pet fox, Pax, who he raised from a kit, but was forced to abandon when his dad went off to war and Peter was sent to his Grandfathers. He then goes on a journey to find Pax.  Along the way, Peter meets a special person who helps him when he gets injured, but who also needs Peter’s help without knowing it.  Peter later finds Pax, who he realises is better off in the wild.  In Pax – Journey Home, Peter feels like he loses everyone he loves, thinks things are his fault, and that it is best not to let anyone get close to him or to care about anyone. Peter travels with the Water Warriors who work hard to put the rivers and reservoirs right after the war poisoned the water, while planning a life alone. Along the way he has to visit places with difficult memories from his past.  Pax is making a similar journey for his family.

I loved these books. They describe feelings so well. They show how people can change and get over bad times, no matter how old you are.  I really loved that the chapters alternated between  Peter’s point of view and Pax’s point of view.   It was really interesting to see the world through the foxes’ eyes; how they would describe the things we do (which can seem really odd); how they sense feelings and danger through smells; and how they’d find our ‘dens’ strange. It also made me think a lot about how destructive people can be to the world and wildlife. We couldn’t decide when the book is set – past, present or future, but it could be anytime as it is everyone’s life journey that matters. The books gave us lots to talk about,  A five star rating from me!

Mum Kate says: These were wonderful books to read together and I think they’d be a great choice for a class.  The books deal with a lot of trauma, without being traumatic – they are simply honest, in a very clear way. They offer so much opportunity for discussion about loss, emotions (a lot of anger, fear and sadness), human impact on the world, and connections and bonds. Also, if and when wild animals should be captive.  The setting both in place and time is hard to gauge which puts more emphasis on the journey and bond of this boy and his fox. A brilliantly told story which we couldn’t put down, and will revisit.

Pax, Journey Home by Sara Pennypacker, ill. by Jon Klassen

About the book

From bestselling and award-winning author Sara Pennypacker comes the long-awaited sequel to Pax; gorgeously crafted, utterly compelling with stunning illustrations by award-winning author and illustrator Jon Klassen.

It’s been a year since Peter and his pet fox, Pax, have seen each other. Once inseparable, they now lead very different lives. Pax must protect his litter of kits in a dangerous world. Meanwhile Peter, orphaned after the war, has left his adopted home and joined the Water Warriors, a group determined to heal the land from the scars of the war.

When one of Pax’s kits falls desperately ill, he turns to the one human he knows he can trust. And no matter how hard Peter tries to harden his broken heart, love keeps finding a way in. Now both boy and fox find themselves on journeys toward home, healing – and each other. A breathtaking novel about chosen families and the healing power of love.

pax journey home review

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Pax, Journey Home

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pax journey home review

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In ‘Pax’ sequel, Pennypacker gives story a satisfying ending

pax journey home review

Sara Pennypacker has brought readers a sequel to her New York Times bestseller, “Pax.” Published in 2016, “Pax” is about a fox and his boy separated by war and desperate to reunite. Finally at the end of the book, they do find each other, after Peter, the boy, has broken his foot and grown stronger for it, and Pax, the fox, joins wild foxes, learning how to survive on his own. Peter lets him go on his way, knowing Pax has found a new family and is where he should be. It ends, and you want more.

“Pax, Journey Home” starts a year after the events of the first book. Peter is living with Vola, the woman who helped him after he broke his foot, and Pax is with the foxes that took him in during the first book. There are always high expectations with sequels for books like “Pax,” which can be tough to live up to. This book addresses loss, grief and the effects of war – socially, emotionally and environmentally.

Peter is subject to a great deal of loss in both books – his mother, his father and his fox – and tries to shut himself off from those who care for him to prevent any more pain. New characters in the sequel foster emotional development, warning that no matter how hard he tries, something will slip in, making him care again. Of course, they end up being proven right.

The war that was starting in “Pax” has ended by the second book, but people’s lives are still in ruin. The background of both stories is inhabited by the war, but Pennypacker doesn’t give specifics about it. In “Pax,” you are sort of told the conflict is about water, but you don’t know who it is with. She is using this tactic with the setting, as well – you aren’t told where you are, only geographic details that you get to put together in your head.

The effects of the war have had an impact not only on the humans displaced by conflict and lack of clean water, but on the wildlife, as well. Pax’s own family is threatened by unseen dangers left lurking by combat. There are groups working to reverse the damage left by the war, but it might already be too late. It should make readers think critically about what we are doing to the world around us. Are we willing to risk the health of our water and the ecosystems it supports for things as petty as our own conflict and profit?

Both books should be a big hit with kids in elementary school (to listen to or read), with parents and teachers also enjoying them. I found “Journey Home’s” ending very satisfying – it will let you sigh with a smile on your face once you finish it, unlike “Pax,” which left me wanting more, wanting a sequel.

Sylvie Manz is a sophomore at Lewis and Clark High school.

Hydropower is ready to step up to the plate against summer heat

Summer is nearly here and the Northwest has sprung to life as the days have grown longer and warmer.

Pax: Journey Home

Pax: Journey Home

Buy from other retailers, what's this book about.

From award-winning author Sara Pennypacker comes the long-awaited sequel to Pax; this is a gorgeously crafted, utterly compelling novel about chosen families and the healing power of love. A New York Times bestseller!It’s been a year since Peter and his pet fox, Pax, have seen each other. Once inseparable, they now lead very different lives.Pax and his mate, Bristle, have welcomed a litter of kits they must protect in a dangerous world. Meanwhile Peter–newly orphaned after the war, racked with guilt and loneliness–leaves his adopted home with Vola to join the Water Warriors, a group of people determined to heal the land from the scars of the war.When one of Pax’s kits falls desperately ill, he turns to the one human he knows he can trust. And no matter how hard Peter tries to harden his broken heart, love keeps finding a way in. Now both boy and fox find themselves on journeys toward home, healing–and each other, once again.As he did for Pax, Jon Klassen, New York Times bestseller, Caldecott medalist, and two-time Caldecott Honoree, has created stunning jacket and interior illustrations.

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The Creatives Behind the Book

Sara Pennypacker is the author of the #1 New York Times bestselling Pax; the award-winning Clementine books and its spinoff series, Waylon!; and the acclaimed novel Summer of the Gypsy Moths. She divides her time between Cape Cod, Massachusetts, and Florida. You can visit her online at www.sarapennypacker.com.

Jon Klassen is the author-illustrator of I Want My Hat Back, a Theodor Seuss Geisel Honor Book; This Is Not My Hat, winner of the Caldecott Medal and the Kate Greenaway Medal; and We Found a Hat. He is also the illustrator of two Caldecott Honor books, Sam and Dave Dig a Hole and Extra Yarn, both written by Mac Barnett. Jon Klassen lives in Los Angeles.

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Pax, journey home.

Pax, Journey Home

The sequel to the wildly popular book Pax (2016), Pennypacker imbues this book with as much depth and beauty as in her first book about a boy and a fox, bonded by love but separated by circumstances beyond their control. In the sequel, Peter and Pax continue to be separated by distance, but each still holds the other in his memories. Now orphaned by his father’s death in the war, Peter is desperately trying to stop the painful reminiscences of his former life; and Pax, with a new family to protect, uses the memory of his time with a loving human to teach his kits that many humans are dangerous, but not all. Looking for purpose and a way to keep himself distanced from any people who would love him, Peter joins the Water Warriors, a group working to clean the lakes and rivers contaminated by the war. Looking for a safe home for his family, Pax travels back over familiar territory. When his kit is irrevocably injured, Pax seeks out the one human who will open his heart enough to care for an ailing fox. A story of loss and redemption, and one in which a boy who tries to harden his heart learns that love will find its way in through any sliver. The book would make a great read-aloud and could find an audience in readers anywhere from grade 3 and up. Highly recommend.

Reviewed by Jill O’Connor, Merrill Memorial Library, Yarmouth

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pax journey home review

When Vola announces a decision she has made for his future, he backs away from it, from her, scared of the strengthening connection between them. Connection is love. It’s family. In Peter’s eyes, it’s the path to even more hurt. As he built his log house, he builds a hard place in his heart – somewhere no one can get in.

He decides it’s time to leave, announcing that he is going to join the Water Warriors. These are people keen to repair the land and water left scarred, ravaged and poisoned by the war. He has plans after his time with them too.

Among these eco-warriors, his forest skills excel. Thinking being busy, trekking miles and working every day will push out memories of lost parents and his best friend Pax, he discovers he was wrong. Especially after meeting a water-loving warrior named Jade.

In the meantime, Pax has his new family to look after. His mate Bristle and their three kits. Two males and a female. Living on an abandoned farm has been safe and peaceful, but humans return bringing fire and fear. He must find them a new home. Without realising it, he is being followed on his quest.

Both Peter and Pax’s journey’s intersect along the way. Pax can smell him, and Peter has heard of foxes in the area. Could it be Pax?

No matter how hard Peter tries to turn his heart to stone, slivers of kindness, nature’s wonder and raw memory inch their way in. Especially when his best friend needs him the most.

A heart-tugging sequel to Pax , this is a story of redemption, forgiveness, dealing with grief and simple kindness. The powerful love between a boy and his fox best friend hasn’t died, in fact it’s even stronger than before and is what saves them both.

An environmental string weaves through this story, as eco warriors clear the war torn land of invasive plants and poisoned waters. Their movements mould Pax and Peter’s movements and also help heal these friends.

Told in alternate viewpoints, each chapter begins with a silhouette of a boy or a fox, clearly indicating who we are with for that chapter.

Sobering but morphing into inexplicably gorgeous.

Author – Sara Pennypacker

Illustrator – Jon Klassen

Age – 8+

Teaching Guide here

Read a review for the first book in this duology (Click on the cover)

Pax Book Review Cover

(2021, Harper Collins, Sequel, Animals, Fox, Love, Pet, Wild, Grief, Memory, Memories, Loss, Kindness, Environment, War, Home, Redemption, Poisoned water, Kits, Vixen, Family)

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pax journey home review

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Pax: journey home.

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pax journey home review

Cover Reveal: 'Pax, Journey Home'

Sequel to 2016 novel picks up tale of the fox and his boy.

“Kadir Nelson once said that he was compelled to make beautiful what had been ugly,” said Sara Pennypacker, whose next middle grade novel, Pax, Journey Home (HarperCollins/Balzer + Bray) will be released this September. “Other people want to fix what has been broken. For me, I have to write a book that makes something that was unjust, just.”

Pax, Journey Home resumes the story begun in her 2016 bestselling release, Pax , which has sold more than 900,000 copies to date: Peter, the motherless son of a soldier, rescues an orphaned red fox and keeps him as a pet until his father forces him to abandon Pax in the woods five years later. Peter’s father then goes off to war and Peter is sent to live with his grandfather 300 miles away, but soon runs away from his new home in search of his beloved Pax. Meanwhile, Pax encounters a skulk of foxes, who teach him how to survive in the wild. The tale alternates between the boy and the fox’s perspectives.

Pennypacker said that she received “a ton of letters” from readers wanting to know what happened after Peter and Pax are reunited in the novel’s closing pages. Calling the conclusion of Pax “a great ending,” Pennypacker said that she initially resisted writing a sequel because she wanted readers to feel “that the right thing happened” to Peter and Pax. “If your emotional investment was to get Peter and Pax back together again, you can imagine that. If it was to know that they both went on and became who they were supposed to be, I left room for that.”

After her agent, Steven Malk, informed her that he too was receiving letters from readers wanting to know what happens next to Peter and Pax, Pennypacker recalled that, “for some reason” she responded, “Of course I know what happens.” She then wove a tale for Malk narrating what happened to Pax after he left Peter to rejoin his four-legged companions. “I went on and on in great detail. I then realized I had just given him an entire plot summary of a novel.”

Although Pennypacker swore Malk to secrecy, he called her a short time later to confess that he had just gotten off the phone with her editor, Donna Bray. Pennypacker remembers Malk telling her, “I hope it’s okay but I couldn’t help myself. I told your editor and she would like a phone call.”

In Pax, Journey Home , Peter, who is mourning his losses while grappling with feelings of guilt and alienation, embarks upon a journey back to his home with two military veterans who are part of a community calling themselves Water Warriors who are working to heal the land from the scars of war. Meanwhile, Pax mates with Bristle and becomes a father. When one of his kits becomes disabled after drinking poisoned water, Pax searches out Peter to obtain his help in saving the kit from certain death in the wild.

“The most important thing for me to say about Pax 2 is that I couldn’t believe how lucky I was to get to be a fox again,” Pennypacker said, explaining that she was able to write from Pax’s perspective after realizing that an essential difference between animals and humans is that animals lack introspection. She wrote from Pax’s point of view, she said, “as if I am a human who is not neurotic and not self-reflective. Everything that happens, I am not going to process it through how others are going to think of me.”

As with Pax , Pennypacker’s impetus for writing Pax, Journey Home was to spotlight injustice. “I really feel that the things that happen to children and animals during war,” she said, “we never take them into account. They’re not part of the calculus for those in charge who decide to go to war. How many foxes will be killed? We never do any of those kinds of calculations. It doesn’t seem fair to me.”

But Pennypacker also wanted to emphasize the bonds that emerge among those from different backgrounds who come together to fight against a common enemy.

“It feels really good to be in a brotherhood, or sisterhood,” she explained of her research into the military community, “And it’s really important to a lot of people to know they’re valued, where they’re contributing to an incredibly important cause. I wanted to say something about that.” As for the Water Warriors, she added, “They use all the good parts about the military—the machinery, the organization, the manpower, the ability to work together and be a team—for a much better cause.”

Pennypacker also strived in Pax, Journey Home to address a topic that isn’t usually addressed in children’s books, as typically, the main character in a children’s book is a child: the experience of parenthood. “I have a character of reproductive age,” she said, “That’s a pretty rare thing in a children’s book and I wanted to go there.” She hopes, she said, that Pax’s love for his kits and the sacrifices he makes to protect the runt of his litter will “give kids some insight into how their parents feel about them—or should feel about them.”

Impressionistic Cover Art Sets the Mood

Jon Klassen, who created the cover art and illustrated the interior of Pax , also drew the cover art for Pax, Journey Home and will produce the interior illustrations. Whereas Pax ’s cover portrayed a fox gazing over the land as the sun rises (or sets), its sequel portrays a fox and his kit looking out over another landscape, this one bounded by rivers. Although the sun shines, there are menacing storm clouds above the orb.

“The trick became,” Klassen said, “how do we make it look very different or at least different from a distance but still look like a set?” He pointed out that his perception was that Pax, Journey Home was “a little darker” than Pax , “due to everyone’s mood and what Peter was going through. And then there was this rain and everything that was going on with water.” Thus, Klassen added the storm clouds, to create the ambiance and a sense that “there’s an emotional storm coming for everybody in this book.”

Klassen added that, because Pennypacker is so precise in her writing, “you know where everything is, how everything feels,” thus freeing him to create impressionistic cover art for both books, explaining, “She goes into such detail in the text, I didn’t feel the need to establish anything literal on the covers as far as what rivers we’re talking about or where things are geographically, or even what the characters look like from the front.” In fact, he confessed, when he tried to draw Pax and his kit facing forward, the effect was “cartoony.” Facing the foxes looking away from the reader worked best, he noted, saying, “It’s mysterious that way but also helps stylistically.”

As for Pennypacker’s reactions to the new cover art, “I didn’t think it could be done but it’s more beautiful, even more evocative than the first,” she told PW .” The first cover was just amazing. This one is even more so.”

After writing such an intense novel, it should come as no surprise that Pennypacker is stepping back and is now working on what may be “the most humorous of all the books I’ve ever written,” categorizing it as “in between a chapter book and novel.” Describing it as "outrageous and funny," Pennypacker said that it’s also highly topical. “It has a lot to say about folks who worship money and power. It may be a bit pointed, I don’t know. Mostly, it’s just hilarious. My writing group told me I am no longer allowed to write serious books—they prefer this.”

Pax, Journey Home by Sara Pennypacker. HarperCollins/Balzer + Bray, 17.99 Sept. ISBN 978-0-06- 293034-7

pax journey home review

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Home / Find a book / Pax, Journey Home

Pax, Journey Home

Pax, Journey Home by Sara Pennypacker, and Jon Klassen

By Sara Pennypacker, and and, Jon Klassen

From bestselling and award-winning author Sara Pennypacker comes the long-awaited sequel to Pax; gorgeously crafted, utterly compelling with stunning illustrations by award-winning author and illustrator Jon Klassen.

A breathtaking novel about chosen families and the healing power of love.

This was incredible and I loved it

What a good ending! It took a little to get into reading the style of the book but it two stories told next to each other quickly took my interest and I wanted to know what happened! A very special bond brought to life.

I enjoyed reading this book very much, it was quite emotional. I liked Pax the best because he is a caring father. I would highly recommend it for primary school children.

I really love foxes.

Ahhhh, this was a lovely follow up to Pax. My heart loved it and I cried at the last line!

Pax now has a family and responsibilities and love.... Peter thinks he wants the opposite and hardens his heart, closing up the idea of a family and a happy ending.

This lovely story follows their journey of them finding each other again, as well as finding themselves. I loved it. Even more so than the first one ❤

The story of Pax and his boy Peter comes full circle in this second, lyrical and introspective book by Sara Pennypacker, which flips the narrative: Pax is a parent, a leader of his family, one with his natural environment, whilst Peter, the rescuer, is the orphan, lost and wandering trapped by his fear of being loved and nurtured but always destined to be abandoned. Those he loved and cared for him have disappeared and he does not want to trust those who show him care and affection. But, as he tries to escape the warmth and refuge of Vola's house sharing a journey with a young couple of Water Warriors, Peter realises that he can never go back and can never be alone. And ultimately it's his friend Pax who forces him to reconcile with life and its future by entrusting him with caring for another precious little fox. A book packed with meaning and metaphors and a moving story about surviving trauma, the power of connecting with nature and the courage in loving and admitting vulnerability.

loved this book

Love to continue this story through a new book.

Have loved both Pax and the follow up, Pax Journey Home. The author has captured the voices of both Peter and Pax and is never over sympathetic portraying the foxes, they aren't humanised. A really sensitive portrayal and an extended tale that explores friendship, family, love, guilt, and what happens when you realise simply surviving isn't enough to live a good life.

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COMMENTS

  1. Pax: Journey Home Book Review

    PAX: JOURNEY HOME takes place a year after the harrowing events of Book 1. The war that caused so much wanton destruction and carnage is over, but the damage to bodies, environment, and souls lingers. Peter is now 13, his father is dead, and in the wake of losing Pax the boy is determined never to feel anything again.

  2. Pax, Journey Home (Pax, #2) by Sara Pennypacker

    When one of Pax's kits falls desperately ill, he turns to the one human he knows he can trust. And no matter how hard Peter tries to harden his broken heart, love keeps finding a way in. Now both boy and fox find themselves on journeys toward home, healing—and each other, once again. 247 pages, Hardcover.

  3. PAX, JOURNEY HOME

    A captivating book situated in present-day discourse around the refugee crisis, featuring two boys who stand by their high values in the face of grave risk and succeed in drawing goodwill from others. (Historical fiction. 10-14) Share your opinion of this book. Boy and fox follow separate paths in postwar rebuilding.

  4. Pax, Journey Home

    Pax, Journey Home is a sequel to the award-winning first book Pax. ... Book reviews cover the content, themes and worldviews of fiction books, not necessarily their literary merit, and equip parents to decide whether a book is appropriate for their children. The inclusion of a book's review does not constitute an endorsement by Focus on the ...

  5. Pax, Journey Home

    Sara Pennypacker is the author of the New York Times bestselling Pax and Pax, Journey Home; the award-winning Clementine series and its spinoff series, Waylon; and the acclaimed novels Summer of the Gypsy Moths and Here in the Real World.She divides her time between Cape Cod, MA, and Florida. You can visit her online at sarapennypacker.com. Jon Klassen grew up in Niagara Falls, Canada, and now ...

  6. Kids' Book Review: Review: Pax Journey Home

    Review: Pax Journey Home. An extraordinary and emotional tale of survival of both animals and humans, I regret having missed the first book, Pax, as I loved Pax: Journey Home, so much! Its beautiful and moving poetic prose carries countless underlying themes and messages that will move the reader deeply. Several parallel stories are in play ...

  7. Pax: Journey Home by Sara Pennypacker, reviewed by Mia and Kate

    Pax: Journey Home by Sara Pennypacker, reviewed by Mia and Kate. Mia says: We received 'Pax - Journey Home' to review and so we read Pax first! They really need to be read in order. Peter is a young teenager whose mum died when he when seven. He had a pet fox, Pax, who he raised from a kit, but was forced to abandon when his dad went off ...

  8. Amazon.com: Customer reviews: Pax, Journey Home

    Find helpful customer reviews and review ratings for Pax, Journey Home at Amazon.com. Read honest and unbiased product reviews from our users.

  9. Children's Review: Pax, Journey Home

    Children's Review: Pax, Journey Home. Peter returns to the woods on a journey of longing and forgiveness that brings closure to both the boy and his beloved fox friend in Sara Pennypacker and Jon Klassen's earnest and wrenching companion novel Pax, Journey Home. In the aftermath of the acclaimed Pax, Peter is nearly 14.

  10. Pax, Journey Home Book Reviews

    5 11. 11 Reviews. Write a Review. From bestselling and award-winning author Sara Pennypacker comes the long-awaited sequel to Pax; gorgeously crafted, utterly compelling with stunning illustrations by award-winning author and illustrator Jon Klassen. It's been a year since Peter and his pet fox, Pax, have seen each other.

  11. Pax, Journey Home Hardcover

    Buy Pax, Journey Home by Pennypacker, Sara, Klassen, Jon (ISBN: 9780062930347) from Amazon's Book Store. Everyday low prices and free delivery on eligible orders. ... the aftermath of conflict, and found family." -- The Horn Book (starred review) "This is a deftly nuanced look at the fragility and strength of the human heart. An impressive ...

  12. Sonderbooks Book Review of Pax: Journey Home

    Wonderful! A sequel to the beautiful book Pax, which is about a boy and his fox, separated by the boy's father and trying to reach each other despite perilous obstacles -- and a war.. In Journey Home, the war is over, but devastation has been left behind.Among that devastation, Peter's father was killed in the war. And for the wildlife, rivers and streams and a reservoir were polluted.

  13. In 'Pax' sequel, Pennypacker gives story a satisfying ending

    Book review "Pax, Journey Home," by Sara Pennypacker (HarperCollins, 256 pages, $17.99) If You Go. ... "Pax, Journey Home" starts a year after the events of the first book. Peter is living ...

  14. Review of Pax: Journey Home by Sara Pennypacker and Jon Klassen

    e-book ed. 978--06-293037-8 $10.99. It has been a year since the dramatic and emotional events of Pax (rev. 3/16). Peter, now thirteen and estranged from his grandfather, is living with the kindly hermit Vola. Pax, the fox Peter abandoned, has his own family, with mate Bristle giving birth to a litter of kits.

  15. Pax: Journey Home by Sara Pennypacker (Pax, #2)

    A New York Times bestseller!It's been a year since Peter and his pet fox, Pax, have seen each other. Once inseparable, they now lead very different lives.Pax and his mate, Bristle, have welcomed a litter of kits they must protect in a dangerous world. Meanwhile Peter-newly orphaned after the war, racked with guilt and loneliness-leaves ...

  16. Pax, Journey Home

    Pax, Journey Home (Pax, #2) by Sara Pennypacker, Jon Klassen Published by Balzer + Bray on September 7, 2021 ISBN: 0062930346 Pages: 256 Genres: Adventure Goodreads. The sequel to the wildly popular book Pax (2016), Pennypacker imbues this book with as much depth and beauty as in her first book about a boy and a fox, bonded by love but separated by circumstances beyond their control.

  17. Pax, Journey Home|Paperback

    Pax, Journey Home is a heartwarming, emotional, yet hopeful read about a boy, a fox, ... Editorial Reviews. Satisfying yet bittersweet conclusion. Klassen's interspersed scene-setting black-and-white art adds textured layers of complexity. This sensitively imagined story effectively explores issues of human-animal connection, emotional ...

  18. Pax (2) Journey Home

    Pax (2) Journey Home. Peter has tried to keep busy since the day he left Pax behind. It's been a year, and a difficult one. Vola has been supportive of Peter building his own room on her property, watching him give attention to detail on his project. Peter's grandfather, still gruff and hard-hearted, has kept his emotional distance, even ...

  19. Parent reviews for Pax: Journey Home

    Read Pax: Journey Home reviews from parents on Common Sense Media. Become a member to write your own review. Read Pax: Journey Home reviews from parents on Common Sense Media. ... Pax: Journey Home. Our Review. Parents say; Kids say (1) Rate book. Sort by: Most Helpful. Most Helpful Most Recent Stars (high to low) Stars (low to high) There aren ...

  20. Cover Reveal: 'Pax, Journey Home'

    Pax, Journey Home by Sara Pennypacker. HarperCollins/Balzer + Bray, 17.99 Sept. ISBN 978--06-293034-7. In her new middle grade novel, 'Pax, Journey Home,' Sara Pennypacker resumes the story begun ...

  21. Pax, Journey Home

    9 reviews. From bestselling and award-winning author Sara Pennypacker comes the long-awaited sequel to Pax; gorgeously crafted, utterly compelling with stunning illustrations by award-winning author and illustrator Jon Klassen. ... Have loved both Pax and the follow up, Pax Journey Home. The author has captured the voices of both Peter and Pax ...

  22. Pax: Journey Home Book Review

    Meanwhile, unbeknownst to him, Pax is travelling in the same direction - towards Peter but also towards the contaminated water. Slowly, surely, inevitably, their paths collide. Told alternately from the points of view of Peter and Pax (although always in the third person), this story will break your heart and warm it at the same time.

  23. Pax: Journey Home (Book 2)

    From bestselling and award-winning author Sara Pennypacker comes the long-awaited sequel to Pax.This is a gorgeously crafted, utterly compelling novel about chosen families and the healing power of love.It s been a year since Peter and his pet fox, Pax, have seen each other. Once inseparable, they now lead very different lives.Pax and his mate, Bristle, have welcomed a litter of kits they must ...