Cover Image: Little House

Little House

Pub Date:   |   Archive Date:

Member Reviews

A really touching short story about Juno who goes to stay with her grandpa whilst her parents are helping abroad. Feeling upset and abandoned, Juno, with the help of an old dolls house, discovers the importance and true meaning of her parents work.

Was this review helpful?

Thank you so much to Barrington Stoke and Netgalley for the ebook to read and review.

Juno’s mum is going away to help those in a crisis around the world, leaving her sad and confused why her mum would just leave her. Staying with her grandpa she finds a run down old doll house and a family with no place to stay and a project forms in her mind and she starts to understand her mums job.

This was really sweet, the instant she found this doll family she connected with them, she knew they had to have a nice home and to be together again. I really liked that through the dolls she learnt and understood her mum, understood her mums childhood and why her mum did what she did.

The illustrations throughout were also really beautiful, seeing as she found the run down house, the dolls, as she starts to create her very own house. I loved seeing the story within each of the illustrations, they really managed to show some of the important bits of the story.

This was a really lovely sweet family story, I really loved how she connected with her grandpa and that they were being so creative together building all the doll house and things for it. He gave her the space she needed but was always there for her when she needed him.

I really enjoyed this book it was so easy to read and I was so happy that Juno found something to hold onto whilst she was so sad and alone. The dolls were a wonderful find and she knew what they needed and with her grandpa being a carpenter she had someone wonderful to help her with everything.

Was this review helpful?

A new Katya Balen story is always something to look forward to; over the last few years she has written some of the most beautiful and moving stories for readers of 8+.
Each of her books has a simplicity of touch but dig deeper and the craft of composition is evident- the selection of vocabulary and construction is almost poetic. Birdsong is a classic
Little House is another mesmerising story- Juno has to spend the summer with her grandfather as her mum has to travel to an unspecified destination to help families who are in challenging circumstances and suffering. The link to many global events can be inferred.
Juno is angry and feels abandoned but the discovery of a broken dolls' house in a her grandfather's attic and the set of dolls without a home sets the wheels in motion as she decides that she will reconstruct their home.
As the story progresses, the house is completed but it looks empty . Juno recalls her mum's words;' It's not enough to give people just enough ' So she embarks on creating the inner elements of the home. Juno begins to understand the reason for her mum's departure to help families.
The subtlety, yet depth, of the message is profound. This is not a long book but would make a good read for a reader who wants greater independence; but this is also a great class read and will initiate some good discussion linked to family and wider global issues.
Richard Johnson's sensitive and slightly ethereal illustrations add another layer of emotion to the story.
This is another winner from Katy Balen- and I'll be recommending Little House to colleagues and friends.

Was this review helpful?

Katya Balen has got to be THE author I turn to when I want beautiful, poetically descriptive writing. This story is stunning - containing just a couple of characters and a seemingly simple but multilayered storyline it is perfect for a quick read and absolutely ideal for struggling readers who still enjoy complex characters and engaging plot.

Was this review helpful?