The app that tells you the best time to run and pee during a movie without missing the best scenes.

100% free (donation supported) iPhone | Android

Children’s Book Review – The Acorn People (1976)

acorn-people-book-cover

The Acorn People is a very short, deeply memorable book everyone should read. At 80 pages, it tells an unsentimental, yet profoundly moving tale about one camp counselor’s experience at summer camp in the 1970s. His kids were all severely disabled.

And all dying.

——Content continues below——

The World’s Most Indispensable Movie App

The RunPee app tells you the best times to
run & pee during a movie
so you don't miss the best scenes.


As seen on

Download the RunPee app.
100% free (donation supported)

Get the RunPee app at the Google Play Store       Get the RunPee app at the Google Play Store

Read more about the RunPee app.



Disabled and dying children, but still important. Modern movies like Sea Biscuit and Finding Nemo deal with various disabilities, famously showing but not just telling: “you don’t throw a whole life away just ’cause he’s banged up a little.” I always remembered this line from Sea Biscuit. I cried at the time because I thought they were talking about me.

Now I realize they were talking about…everyone.

These boys were real people

The five children featured by author Ron Jones (from his real-life camp counselor experience) are Benny B, Spider, Arid, Thomas, and Martin. They are missing limbs/major organs, are blind, or can’t move the limbs they do have.

What people are saying
about the RunPee app.

star star star star star

Nprtykty, 03/28/2021

Brilliant idea with great information

I’ve been using RunPee for a few years now and it’s basically a requirement of going to the movies for me. The best part of course are the “pee times” that give you cues, synopses and times for when you can pee without missing the most important parts of the movie. There is also information about the credits- length, extras and if there are any extra scenes at the wayyy end. Super helpful to just know that it is or isn’t worth staying. There is a timer function that will buzz your phone when it’s a good time to pee. I also appreciate that the app is very conscientious about it being an app you use in a theater- dark background, all silent alarms etc. I will always enjoy the experience of the theater even if I could watch things at home- but I’ve even used it at home to check for things like after credit scenes or other information too.

View all reviews
Apple App Store | Google Play Store

Download RunPee app

Apple App store     Google Play Store

On the first day of camp, Ron feels he can’t be around such sad, difficult children. He almost goes home. But when Ron makes the very first acorn necklace during Arts & Crafts, everything changes. The acorn necklaces bond the boys and ultimately the entire camp in a symbolic way.

Through the informal, humorous, and persistent dedication of Ron and co-counselor Dominic, the boys have an epic mountain climb, swim laps, find girlfriends, laugh, race, and learn to peacefully buck the oppressive regime of the ‘evil’ camp director (who should have been nowhere near children, let alone profoundly disabled ones. But, then, this was the 70s).

At the climax, the entire camp is alive with laughter and hope. The kids host a riotous swimming pageant with pirates and water ballet for the visiting parents. The audience goes bonkers to see such joy from their ‘problem’ children.

The themes are a little mature for younger kids, but the message is crucial in these times. Tolerance, acceptance, inner strength, fears of ‘normal’ people about those who are ‘different’…all of this is grist for meaningful discussion with your child. It’s a good one to read aloud, to share in the triumphs of these five remarkable kids during one perfect summer.

And it’s a noble way to celebrate those short lives, so they live on among those who remember them. You’ll be super glad you read this story. Recommended.

Book Grade: A+

Buy The Acorn People, from Amazon. By Ron Jones, 1976, 80 pages.
Or listen to the entire book read out loud for free on YouTube (Parts 1 and 2.)

The Acorn People was also made into a made-for-TV movie in 1981. Here’s the IMDb link. There are a series of clips from the movie on YouTube and I’m having trouble finding them all. I’ll include a clip or two here, but if anyone can find the entire movie to stream, please let me know in the comments below.

Don’t miss your favorite movie moments because you have to pee or need a snack. Use the RunPee app (Androidor iPhone) when you go to the movies. We have Peetimes for all wide release films every week, including Beetlejuice Beetlejuice, Reagan, Deadpool & Wolverine and coming soon Transformers One, The Wild Robot, Megalopolis, Joker: Folie à Deux, Venom: The Last Ride  and many others. We have literally thousands of Peetimes—from classic movies through today’s blockbusters. You can also keep up with movie news and reviews on our blog, or by following us on Twitter @RunPee. If there’s a new film out there, we’ve got your bladder covered.

Comments

2 responses to “Children’s Book Review – The Acorn People (1976)”

  1. I want to reiterate this amazing quote: “You don’t throw a whole life away just ’cause he’s banged up a little.”

    I get goosebumps from this one. It’s exactly what everyone needs to hear.

  2. A thought. I think camp all worked so well for these kids bc no one told the counselors that they couldn’t do these things with disabled children. No one really knew what to do or not do in the 70s. So how they got these boys summiting Lookout Mountain for example is so epic, and so meaningful, and nowadays would never happen bc it was actually kind of dangerous. I love it.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

RunPee