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Rabbits. Juvenile fiction.
Farms. Juvenile fiction.
Friendship. Juvenile fiction.
Rabbits. Fiction.
Farms. Fiction.
Friendship. Fiction.
Starred Review Venturing, as the author readily acknowledges in her afterword, into Charlotte's Web territory, Wood crafts a tale of interspecies cooperation in a rural setting that is lit up with exhibitions of uncommon courage, loyalty, humor, and tolerance t to mention extreme cuteness. Electrified by her old bunny mentor's terrifying tales of "The Mauler" roaring, orange, earth-digging monster rst-year cottontail Alice nerves herself to set aside her natural timorousness, as well as millennia of conflicting agendas, and intrepidly sets out to help the new owners of run-down Prune Street Farm by enlisting fellow rabbits and making deals with local predators to tend its vegetable patch. Fortunately, the clueless but hardworking Harveys, fresh from Brooklyn, have a friendly neighbor and a supportive rural community, not to mention a toddler and a small dog who both understand the language of the local wildlife. Then there's mopey 10-year-old Carl, resilient enough to take in stride the eventual discovery that the bountiful garden didn't just magically grow itself and, by the end, to grow himself into his new life. Along with worthy values aplenty, this bustling tale offers a villainous real-estate speculator to hiss, a cast bustling with talking animals, and a long-eared protagonist who goes on to a fitting end (for a rabbit) and well merits her valedictory: "Farewell, sweet Alice! A bunny among bunnies, indeed." Terrific.
Horn BookA folksy omniscient narrator tells the tale of two families, rabbit and human, that share a territory. Young cottontail Alice and her brother Thistle are enjoying their first spring in their home of Burrow. Humans Carl, his baby sister, and his hapless idealistic back-to-the-land parents have just moved to a nearby country farm. Carl and the bunnies find a common goal in foiling a rapacious real estate developer by ensuring the viability of the farm as Carl and the rabbits, with a little help from their friends (fox, bald eagle, family dog), invent and carry out various schemes. As an animal fantasy, this lies somewhere between Watership Down and The Tale of Peter Rabbit, with detailed and fascinating rabbit world-building a la Adams ("Rabbits have four birthdays a year, one for each season, so the kits of her litter were three months old in human time") and cozy, cadenced prose a la Potter ("brave the meadow, dodge the dog, outwit the farmer, and tunnel beneath the garden fence"). The storytelling is relaxed and digressive, the humor genially satiric, and the dialogue sparky. Fans of Cynthia Voigt's Young Fredle (rev. 3/11) will feel right at home, and readers of Charlotte's Web will delight in several sly echoes. An excellent choice for a family or classroom read-aloud. Sarah Ellis
Kirkus ReviewsWith the future of their valley home at stake, two brave young rabbits take up farming.The farm's newbie human owners include the Harvey parents, country enthusiasts newly liberated from office life; son Carl, 10, who misses Brooklyn; daughter Marie, 1; and the family's shiba inu, Foxy. When an intimidating local developer drops by, hoping to pressure the naïve Harveys into selling, young Alice and her brother, Thistle, two rabbits, overhear the sales pitch. After Lester, a burrow elder who's eaten his way through farm catalogs, tells them that development will destroy their valley, Alice hatches a plan to make the Harveys' farm succeed. Challenges quickly mount. To obtain and plant seeds, weed, and keep hungry critters away from them when they sprout, Alice must incentivize interspecies cooperation. Recruits, wild and tame, are needed: a fox, bald eagle, chipmunks, voles, Foxy, baby Marie (an adept interspecies interpreter), and Carl, providing human cover for the rabbit farmers. The effort will eventually ensnare neighbors, ornithologists, and locavore chefs along with the editors of Hipster Farmer magazine. Like the denizens of E.B. White's Charlotte's Web, these characters-animal and human, predator and prey-are lovingly observed. They are a deeply engaging, mostly endearing bunch whose natures may put them at odds but who share a world. Human characters follow a White default.Stoutly non-speciesist, this is an effervescent delight. (author's note) (Animal fiction. 8-12)
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)This captivating, wry novel opens with the revelation that the longstanding antagonism between farmers and rabbits is rooted in vegetables, which -farmers love to grow, and rabbits love to eat.- After Alice, a curious rabbit kit, watches the Harvey family move into a deserted farmhouse, she and her brother sneak onto the property and overhear disconcerting news: a greedy developer is intent on buying the property from the Harveys, city folk determined to become farmers. As the young rabbits plant and tend to a thriving vegetable garden in hopes of helping the family make a go of it, the Harveys- intuitive dog, Foxy, becomes their ally, at one point musing that properly running a farm is
School Library JournalGr 3-5 Farmers and rabbits have a great literary history as enemies, but what might they accomplish if they worked together? Wood offers a fanciful twist on Peter Rabbit, toggling between the rabbit world and the human world, tracking a pair of adventurous kits and a young family that has moved from Brooklyn to try their hands at farming. The pace is a bit slow and some of the jokes (about hipsters, primarily) may be better suited to an adult audience. That said, the focus on the natural world, quirky characters, and whimsical adventures make this a good read-aloud candidate for fans of Charlotte's Web or other gentle farm stories. VERDICT Not a first purchase, but a sweet option for those looking for a slower-paced animal story.Gesse Stark-Smith, Multnomah County Lib., Portland, OR
Starred Review ALA Booklist
Horn Book
Kirkus Reviews
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
School Library Journal
In Maryrose Wood's stunning middle-grade novel, Alice's Farm , a brave young rabbit must work with her natural predators to save her farmland home and secretly help the farm's earnest but incompetent new owners. When a new family moves into Prune Street Farm, Alice and the other cottontails are cautious. The new owners are from the city; the family and their dog are not at all what the rabbits expect, and soon Alice is making new friends and doing things no rabbit has done before. When she overhears a plan by a developer to run the family off and bulldoze the farm, Alice comes up with a plan, helped by the farmer's son, and other animals, including a majestic bald eagle. Here is a stunning celebration of life, the bitter and the sweet. Alice is some rabbit -- a character readers will love for generations to come.