|   Kirkus Review of Wayne's Book "Really, Granddad? In this debut short  story collection, a Canadian grandfather offers 50 family anecdotes. Spanning the 1950s  through the early ‘70s, this heartwarming assemblage of memories stars the  author himself – as a loveable but often mischievous boy – who ultimately  matures into a responsible young man. Growing up in a military family, he had  to relocate quite a bit, so these incidents take place in several rural  Canadian locations – like Greenwood, Nova Scotia – as well as Marville, France.  The stories are framed by italicized conversations between Sherrard and his  granddaughter, Claire, whose love for hearing about Grandad’s life inspired him  to write it down. Told with a friendly voice and easy-flowing, first-person  prose, these anecdotes mostly conclude with a positive, uplifting moral. For  example, during visits to his grandparents’ farm at haying time, the author  learned the value of a work ethic. After disobeying a parent led to his  sister’s getting injured, he realized that honesty was always the best policy.  He also paints some touching portraits of colorful family members, like grandma  Nanny, who doggedly taught him to read after a teacher had given up hope. Then  there was his tough-as-nails father, who had a gentle side, too – he once  bravely saved a skunk whose head was trapped in a glass jar. Even though this  energetic compilation can be corny (there are plenty of winks and grins in  Granddad and Claire’s conversations), many nostalgia lovers will enjoy  Sherrard’s homespun humor and familiar situations. Who hasn’t heard a tale  about a silly boy sticking his tongue on a freezing metal railing? And many  people know how pesty – and ridiculously funny – those doggone gophers can be,  especially when one chases the family dog. Complete with cute sketches by  Dewitt and black-and-white family photographs, these mostly cheerful vignettes  feel as comforting as old Reader’s Digest stories about glory days on the farm.
 Sweet, sentimental  slices of simpler times.
 Kirkus Reviews
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