Togo to the Rescue: How a Heroic Husky Saved the Lives of Children in Alaska
by Mélisande Potter; illus. by Giselle Potter
Primary Ottaviano/Little, Brown 40 pp.
10/24 9780316335447 $18.99
The Potter mother-daughter team tells the true story of Togo, an exceptional Siberian husky owned by the musher Leonhard Seppala of Nome, Alaska. An accessible text recounts Togo’s somewhat tumultuous beginnings. Ultimately, Seppala made him the lead dog of his sled team hauling cargoes of food and mail. In January 1925, when Togo was almost twelve, an outbreak of diphtheria in Nome coincided with a “blasting” blizzard. Families were desperate to get medicine, and the town knew their only hope was the sled dogs. In a carefully planned relay, one hundred fifty dogs would cover the 674-mile route between Nome and Anchorage. Seppala’s team, with Togo in the lead, traveled the hardest and longest part of the race, over two hundred fifty miles. “He steered his team along jagged ice-capped slopes and led them up and over a five-thousand-foot mountain pass!” The book emphasizes the role that Togo’s intelligence and bravery played in the serum’s record-time arrival, which saved the lives of many children. Mélisande Potter crafts an exciting story and deftly weaves the history of the Serum Run of 1925 into one canine hero’s tale. Giselle Potter, using ink and watercolor, perfectly captures Togo’s clear-sighted determination and fearlessness. Appended with an author’s note and sources.
From the ">November/December 2024 issue of The Horn Book Magazine.
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