The Junkyard by Bryan Reilly


The Junkyard by Bryan Reilly
Publisher: Self-Published
Genre: Middle Grade (8 – 12 y.o.), Action/Adventure, Contemporary
Rating: 5 Stars
Reviewed by Astilbe

Ninja is a pit bull who would rather die than hurt another dog. When she purposefully loses in the fighting ring of a cruel junkyard owner, Mr. Fergusen, she is punished and left for dead at the edge of a nearby forest. A tribe of stray junkyard dogs finds her and gives her a new name, Maytag. They nurse her back to health and welcome her into their secret home inside the northern junkyard’s mountains of wrecked cars, appliances, tires, and trains. For the first time, Maytag feels love and is incredibly relieved to be free of Mr. Fergusen’s fighting ring.

But her relief is short-lived.

Saab, the aggressive Rottweiler of the southern junkyard, plans to conquer the north with the help of Canis, a vengeful forest wolf. If the junkyard becomes a warzone, Mr. Fergusen will surely take Dodge’s strays to the put-down place. When Saab’s plan is set in motion, Maytag must decide if her new friends are worth fighting for.

A better life is possible.

What a creative and unique tale! I’ve never seen middle grade fiction cover this topic, and I enjoyed exploring Mr. Reilly’s take on what it might be like to not only be a dog in general but to be a dog who has recently escaped the fighting ring in particular. His explanations of the suffering these animals went through were vivid, but he made sure to include some happier moments as well to balance things out.

The world building was well done, especially the descriptions of the hiding places in the junkyard that the owner of this place was unaware of. In the first scene, I wondered how any animal could survive in such a violent and hostile place and why the strays decided to stick so close by to the barn where fighting dogs tried to survive in-between matches. Other readers should discover the answers to these questions for themselves, but they certainly added a lot of tension to the plot until the main character began to discover the answers.

Honestly, it was the ending that convinced me to give this one a full five-star rating. It wrapped everything up beautifully while still remaining true to the sometimes harsh world these characters lived in. There were messages included throughout this novella, but especially in the last few scenes, about compassion, hope, loyalty, and surviving difficult times that were never preachy but instead invited the audience to think critically as the characters faced situations where the odds were heavily stacked against them.

The Junkyard was heartwarming and original.

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