Disappearance Turns Around Boy’s Life

Catherine Ryan Hyde, who authored the huge best seller Pay It Forward, is sneaky. I was an hour or so into Have You Seen Luis Velez? and wondered how her book would measure up to 10 others by Hyde that I had read. And then it happened.

I was hooked, just as I have been in all her books, when I was drawn like a powerful magnet to the seductive mysteries surrounding the lives of the major players.

Raymond Jaffe, 17, lives in a New York City apartment with his mom—who is preoccupied with two jobs—and an aloof, cold stepdad. Every other weekend, he stays with his dad and his stepmom, who sees Raymond as a painful reminder of her husband’s previous life.

His best (and only) friend moves away, leaving him as a school outcast who cares for a feral cat that lives in an abandoned building. As you might expect, Raymond is lonely, but his backbone strengthens when he finds purpose in the greatest search of his life.

Enter Mildred Guterman, a blind German Jew who barely escaped the Holocaust. At 92, she depends on Luis Velez, a young man with a pregnant wife, two kids, and a kind heart. He takes Mrs. G to the grocery store every few days and helps her with other chores.

One day, she calls out to Raymond when she hears his squeaky shoe in the apartment building hallway. Almost out of food, she asks Raymond if he knows where Luis Velez has gone. No one seems to know. Filling the void, Raymond becomes her grocery store fill-in helper and he brings her the cat to keep her company.

For Raymond, Mrs. G is much more than a new friend, and he discovers that he can talk to her about issues in his life that he has never felt comfortable voicing to anyone. It pains him that his elderly neighbor dearly misses her best friend, so he sets out to get to the bottom of Luis Velez’ disappearance. Raymond’s journey takes him around New York City to dead ends, dangerous characters, slammed doors, and language challenges.

Does Raymond find Luis? Yes and no.

Race, bigotry, justice, and the power of kindness all play prominent roles in this story. This is an ideal choice for a book club selection and the author includes a list of questions for that purpose.

I have read about a fourth of Hyde’s 40-plus books. “Have You Seen Luis Velez?” will not be the last.

Come Aboard Dove for an Unforgettable Voyage

I begin with advice for parents: Don’t give Dove to your kid if you want him or her to live a life in one place, or even in one country.

And definitely hide the book unless you want to encourage youthful thoughts about adventures that pose life-threatening risks.
The kid in the book is now 75 and lives in Montana, but I wonder if he would have supported such an undertaking for either of his children.
Robin Lee Graham was 16–yes, just 16–when he sailed from California, westward in 1965, destined to become the youngest to sail around the world alone.

Many at the time questioned his father’s wisdom. What was he thinking? How could he let him go? I would ask those naysayers: What if his dad had tried to stop him?

His mother tried everything to block his trip, but his dad had sailed with Robin extensively and knew the journey may have been a huge risk for even the most experienced sailor, but he refused to squelch his son’s spirit for adventure and solitude.

Five years later, Robin returned a married man (still sailing solo, though), about to become a father, and was a global celebrity built by three major stories and photo spreads in National Geographic magazine. There were also countless stories about his journey by media outlets worldwide. Courage beyond belief, luck, emotion, dreams, naiveté, extreme loneliness, depression, and two (sometimes three) cats were his companions. Based on the numerous close calls Robin survived, maybe he was the one with nine lives.

If you follow my book reviews, you know I am a sucker for adventure stories. I love following people, young and old, who reject the comfort of their couches in favor of the hardships, uncertainty, and joys of traveling long distances on their feet, boat, bicycle, or other conveyance.

Dove is a great book. Robin wrote it along with Derek Gill, first publishing in 1972. It is based on the recordings he taped and sent home during his many stops along the way.

I will resist the temptation to tell you more. If you read Dove, you will be glad I stopped here.