Where I Belong
by Mary Downing Hahn
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No one is kind to sixth-grader Brendan Doyle: his foster mother, his teachers, his classmates, and especially the thugs who bully him. He takes refuge in books, drawing, carving, and daydreaming. When Brendan stumbles upon an old man near his tree house in the Virginia woods, he is quick to believe that this is the magical Green Man, guardian spirit of the forest. Brendan's need to immerse himself in his fantasy world becomes more acute, until he meets a girl with secrets of her own who may show more just keep his feet on the ground.. show less
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I enjoyed Brandon and Shea's story, especially their relationship with the "Green Man" of the woods. A few times, Brandon sounded a bit too selfish and whiny, but then again, he'd been in foster care too long, too. The scenes in the tree house and in the woods were most fine. A story that makes one see from another's point of view. I loved how Brandon learns to understand the Green Man's apparent "faults" as not faults, but part of the older man's being. Readers will understand the values of silence.
Brendan Doyle, a sixth-grader with long hair and a standoffish attitude, struggles with bullying and feels alienated at home and at school. He retreats into his art and builds a treehouse in the forest, where he begins to believe that the mythical Green Man—and its guardian spirit—might protect him. Through friendships with a girl named Shea and a mysterious older man, Brendan learns to trust others and find his own sense of belonging. Emotional, compassionate, and hopeful, this story explores identity, healing, and transformation.
Where I Belong tells the story of Brendan, a foster child with no friends or family. His world gets turned upside down when he fails 6th grade and must attend summer school to move on. He’s had a terrible experience in school, he likely has an undiagnosed learning disability, and has no interest in going to 7th grade. However, summer school interferes with his plans to hang out in his special tree house in the forest, where he has met the Green Man, the spirit of the forest. As Brendan spends time with the Green Man and his new friend from summer school, he has to learn to be vulnerable and honest, even about the parts of his life that he doesn’t want to face. A brutal attack and a harsh realization help Brendan face the truth and show more move from childhood to middle school with the support of his new friends and teacher. The author’s approach to the moment we need to shed our childhood innocence and move to the next stage of life is full of emotion. show less
No one is kind to sixth-grader Brendan Doyle: his foster mother, his teachers, his classmates, and especially the thugs who bully him. He takes refuge in books, drawing, carving, and daydreaming. When Brendan stumbles upon an old man near his tree house in the Virginia woods, he is quick to believe that this is the magical Green Man, guardian spirit of the forest.
The above is the summary provided by Goodreads.
The above is the summary provided by Goodreads.
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Author Information

53+ Works 18,792 Members
Mary Downing Hahn grew up in College Park, Maryland. After graduating college, she worked as an art teacher, a college instructor, and a children's librarian in Prince George's Public Library System. She published her first novel, The Sara Summer, at the age of 41. Since then, she has been a full-time writer and averages one book a year. Her ghost show more story Wait till Helen Comes was the winner of 12 state children's book awards and she received the Scott O'Dell award for her World War II novel Stepping on the Cracks. She currently lives with her husband in Columbia, Maryland. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Awards and Honors
Awards
Common Knowledge
- Epigraph
- We could never have loved the earth so well if we had had no childhood in it.
-George Eliot, The Mill on the Floss - Dedication
- For nemophilists everywhere* (Those who love the woods)
- First words
- I'm sitting at my desk, drawing on the back of my math worksheet, not even trying to solves the problems today.
- Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)Silently, we walk through the woods, toward home.
Classifications
- Genres
- Tween, Kids, Fiction and Literature
- DDC/MDS
- 158.128 — Philosophy & psychology Psychology Applied psychology Personal improvement and analysis Personal improvement and analysis through meditation Meditations
- LCC
- PZ7 .H1256 .W — Language and Literature Fiction and juvenile belles lettres Fiction and juvenile belles lettres Juvenile belles lettres
- BISAC
Statistics
- Members
- 77
- Popularity
- 410,533
- Reviews
- 4
- Rating
- (4.10)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Paper, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 5




















































