Title:
The Littlest Bigfoot
Author:
Jennifer Weiner
Read
by: Emma Galvin, Keith Nobbs, & Jen
Ponton
Publisher:
Simon & Schuster Audio
Length:
Approximately 6 hours and 41 minutes
Source:
Review Copy from Simon & Schuster Audio.
Thank-you!
My
eight-year old daughter, Penelope, and I have been enjoying listening to The Littlest
Bigfoot together whenever we are in the car with just the two of us. We started this audiobook on a trip to
Chicago in March and finished it on a trip to Girl Scout camp at the beginning
of July. The Littlest Bigfoot is a middle grade reader book that is both
contemporary and fantasy. It is a great
novel about fitting in and bullying.
Alice
Mayfair is a twelve year old girl that has always felt different and outside of
her family. Her mother is a beautiful,
skinny, rich woman in New York City and doesn’t know what to do with Alice who
is large and doesn’t like to follow the rules. Alice’s parents send her to a
string of boarding schools and she is always alone and picked on. Alice is sent to a new hippy type school,
“The Experimental Center of Love and Learning” where she tries hard to fit in
with the popular crowd, until one day, she finds herself picked on and on the
outside again. That is until she rescues
a drowning girl named Millie from the lake.
Millie
also feels left out in her world. She
belongs to a tribe of Yare (Bigfoot), but she is small in stature and has rare
silver fur. Her parents are very
protective. Millie longs to join the “no
fur” world and become a singer. When she
meets Alice, she finally starts to feel like she may belong.
Jeremy
is an outcast who lives in a nearby town.
His obsession is finding a Bigfoot.
When he starts to uncover information that there could be a Bigfoot at
the strange experimental school outside of town, he starts a process of fear
that threatens to overwhelm the school and expose the Yare tribe. Will Jeremy succeed?
Penelope
and I both really enjoyed this tale.
Penelope in particular really liked the theme of accepting everyone no
matter what they look like. She’s
started to see bullying happen in ways at childcare and school and this was a
great book to discuss with her. She was
very struck as well on how Alice’s parents did not treat her well and it made
her very sad.
The
novel was narrated by the three main characters. The audiobook had three different narrators
to match each point of view which Penelope and I both enjoyed. Penelope’s only complaint about the audiobook
was that she wished when Jeremy talked in Alice’s chapter that it would have
been in his voice.
Overall,
The Littlest Bigfoot was an enjoyable audiobook for both child and adult with a
unique story and good moral about bullying.
The surprise at the end has us ready to start the second book!
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteIt sounds like you and your daughter enjoyed listening to this audiobook together. It is a good way to start conversations about issues such as bullying. Wonderful review, Laura! Have a great weekend.
DeleteThis is such a good review. Thank you.
ReplyDelete