We're going to read Flyaway Boy again at my book club! We've read and enjoyed When the World Went Dark by Jane de Suza twice, and I look forward to reading this one with another batch too. It's perfect to discuss so many things - form, narrative voice, imagination, possibility ... The list of ideas below just about scratches the surface of everything we can do with the book! Boxes Flyaway Boy opens with a bit about boxes. What neat little boxes do we fit into? Are there any labels we give ourselves, or any labels people give us? Especially as many of the children join my book club batch after batch, I'd love to know if there are any labels they give one another. What labels do they associate with the others at the book club?It's an interesting introspective activity to undertake even without the context of the book because sometimes, we create … [Read more...]
Flyaway Boy
What an unexpected book!I've been meaning to read Flyaway Boy for a while, but technological problems came in the way. I bought a Kindle edition only to learn that the ebook is not compatible with my Kindle, which meant that I had to read it on my laptop. Sitting at my laptop and reading doesn't feel like reading at all. It feels like I'm working, even though I do so much that is not work when I'm at my laptop. I love to lounge and read and my laptop isn't really conducive to that.But Flyaway Boy was a delight. I took a while to read it, much longer than I would have over a physical book, but I thoroughly enjoyed it.I chuckled at the audacity of the book, revelling in how it surprised a laugh out of me at the oddest of places. The protagonist Kabir is a joy. He's a child after my own heart, a dreamer, an imaginer, a starry-eyed free spirit. But more, I love the storytelling, … [Read more...]


