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The hen who dreamed she could fly review
The hen who dreamed she could fly review








the hen who dreamed she could fly review

No longer content to lay eggs on command only to have them carted off to the market, she glimpses her future every morning through the barn doors, where the other animals roam free, and comes up with a plan to escape into the wild – and to hatch an egg of her own.Īn anthem for individuality and motherhood, The Hen Who Dreamed She Could Fly has captivated millions of fans in Korea, where it is a contemporary classic.

the hen who dreamed she could fly review

The Hen Who Dreamed She Could Fly Synopsis It would be enjoyed by confident readers as an animal story in its own right, but it has also developed a wider audience with older readers who are drawn into its underlying complexity.The 2 million-copy best-selling modern fable from Korea that won hearts around the world. Translated from its original language of Korean, it has sold more than two million copies worldwide. The themes are manifold and form a dense subtext – it is difficult to define it as solely modern fable as it is also a metaphor for brave motherhood. Her end comes in a glorious act of self-sacrifice which buys freedom for her duckling, now grown and able to fly away.Īlthough the anthropomorphic tale is a well-worn genre, and although the translation can sometimes stilt the narrative flow, this is a moving and heart-warming tale about family, growing up, life and death. She is a loving, loyal and courageous mother, determined to raise Baby in the face of adversity. Undeterred, Sprout forms a strong friendship with Straggler the duck and when his mate falls prey to the ever-present threat of the weasel, Sprout hatches her egg and adopts the duckling. The barnyard, she discovers, is not the happy place which she had anticipated, but a place of hierarchies, prejudice and fear. Then one anxious day, when the end of her egg laying days means certain death, Sprout unexpectedly finds herself free and on the run. From the coop in which she lays her daily eggs, Sprout can almost taste the freedom that she sees in the barnyard. Sprout is a hen whose only desire and hope in life is to raise her own chick. The Hen who Dreamed She Could Fly Author: Sun-Mi Hwang Illustrator: Kazuko Nomoto










The hen who dreamed she could fly review