The Bravest Dog Ever: The True Story of Balto
Where to buy The Most courageous Dog Ever: The Right Tale of Balto books online?
Product Description
This is the right tale about a very courageous dog who, in 1925, led his team 700 miles through blinding snowdrifts, over a frozen river, and around cracking ice to save two diphtheria-stricken children.
Buy Cheap The Most courageous Dog Ever: The Right Tale of Balto Online
Related posts:

This is the real tale of Balto not at all based on the highly fictionalized movie. A fantastic book for kids.
Reader’s Rating: 4 / 5
Although this is an inspiring and well-written piece of literature, the fact is that, even though Balto took the medicine 53 miles, his was the last leg of the relay. There were additional teams of dogs who traveled farther and longer than Balto’s team, and they received none of the credit afterwards. I suppose it’s the politics of heroism, which is sad, but they should still be acknowledged for having gotten the medicine far enough for Balto to see it delivered safely to the sick people.
Reader’s Rating: 2 / 5
This book keeps kids interested as they read! It makes reading enjoyable!! My students Like it!!!
Reader’s Rating: 5 / 5
Fantastic book…..my 7 year ancient daughter likes it and read it herself. Excellent information about Balto.
Reader’s Rating: 5 / 5
I can’t be the only Mom that gets frustrated by this. I go to buy early reading books and encounter ONLY TV- and movie- marketed characters in the books. I would like better choices.
Anyway, Balto was the only Step-3 book in the store that did NOT have a Princess or SpongeBob on the take in, so we got it. I expected to get some flack from the child who is worried of dogs, but even he liked it honestly well.
Balto is a sled dog in 1925 who participates in a relay. The purpose is to bring medicine to an Alaskan town with a diphtheria epidemic, carrying it through a driving blizzard and terrible conditions. Balto had the second-to-last leg of the relay, but when it was time to hand off to another team, the additional team was not there. So Balto and his team kept going. Since he was the dog who made it into town with the medicine, he got the credit for the whole adventure! We talked about the additional dog teams and drivers who had to come through the deep snow, and how all persons teams effective together got the job done.
Here is what the first grader liked best about the tale (his words):
+ There is a map. Maps are excellent.
+ The dog kept going.
+ The doctor helped the sick children.
+ I like the picture of the statue of Balto.
+ Balto was a hero.
Here is what the Mom liked in the tale:
+ It would have been simple to quit, but the driver and his sled team kept going, despite miserable conditions.
+ The words were just challenging enough.
+ I liked the map, too.
+ The illustrations are wonderful. The book has honestly many pages (48), but the pictures keep up the excitement.
+ There really is a statue of Balto in Central Park, and you can google it to see the real statue (of course, if you live near NYC, you can see it live!)
As far as reading levels go, I would say level 3 is a pretty excellent judgment. My son was reading phonics readers and step 1 readers over the summer, and his confidence is building. This book did not frustrate him, but it took him a while to sound out some of the words. I had to help with the names of some towns and intricate words (Anchorage, diphtheria). The rest, he did himself.
Reader’s Rating: 4 / 5