Abigay’s Farm is a contemporary multigenerational middle
grade story that captures the experience of life on a farm as seen through the
eyes of a twelve year old girl.
Abigay and her twin brother Gabriel love spending holidays
at their grandparent’s farm. Her grandmother has taught her the names of the
flowers, birds and trees and where the badger sett is. Abigay knows how to
handle baby chicks and is excited to see a foal born. This time, however, things
are different as Gabriel is in hospital and cannot come and Abigay misses him
terribly. The arrival of an artistic French Canadian family including the
lively and, at times, irritating eight year old Juliette keeps her busy.
Abigay’s grandparents are getting older and have financial
worries and her parents are not interested in taking on the farm. They have a
life and important work in the city. Abigay is also preoccupied with the
serious health issues of Abigay’s twin brother, Gabriel. It slowly begins to
dawn on her that the farm is in danger of being sold and to none other than Mr
King, the father of Christopher, the local bully. Abigay starts making plans on
how to save the farm but it is Gabriel who hits upon the possible solution of
creating an Open Farm. It is an uphill struggle for Abigay’s ideas to be taken
seriously.
Then Grandpa uncovers a time capsule that he buried as a
child in the 1960s. The rediscovery of the artefacts including photographs of
his family have a profound and
galvanising effect on him and reminds him that, “When you’ve got hope, all
sorts of things are possible.”
This story is written in a warm and gentle style that draws
up Odette’s own personal experience of both family diversity and farm life.
Abigay’s and Gabriel’s father’s family is Jamaican. Patrice Agg’s line drawings
capture the relationship between the twins as well as enhancing key moments in
the story.
Candy Gourlay succinctly sums up the tone and themes of this
book when she described it as, “A warm
embrace of a story filled with family love amidst the grit and charm of a farm
setting.”
This book is an essential for every primary school library
and would make a lovely Christmas present. It provides a refreshing
counterbalance to the high volume of middle grade fantasy that is currently
around.
ISBN978-1-80042-133-2
Published by SilverWood Books silverwoodbooks.co.uk
1 comment:
Lovely review - and a beautiful life-affirming story too.
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