Chook Chook: Saving The Farm by Wai Chim (University of
Queensland Press)
PB RRP $14.95
ISBN 9780 7022 5316 4
Reviewed by Jo Antareau
Mei and her delightful pets Little and Lo return for
the third chapter of their adventurous life together. Although the story
features characters from the two previous stories, this book can stand on its
own.
As the family prepare for their Chinese New year
celebrations, their joy is shattered by the news that village is threatened by
plans to demolish it to build a freeway through it. This is the only life that
Mei and her neighbours have known, the place their forebears have lived and
worked for generations. They love and cherish their town even though the
bureaucrats sneer at its backwardness.
Readers will cheer as Mei stands up to the truly nasty
deputy director and tells him to leave them alone. But her courage seems to be
for nothing. All around them, villagers are giving up, selling their properties
and leaving.
Mei and her brothers hatch a plan to save their
village by getting it registered with the National Preservation List of Traditional
Villages – a process which involves demonstrating its cultural uniqueness. Will
the chooks help – or hinder their attempts?
Chim’s story weaves details of the daily life in
China, such as the joy of Chinese New Year and the associated customs, and
demonstrates that it is the little details, the things we take for granted,
that define us and make our lives unique.
A fun read for younger children. I wonder if Chim
plans a fourth instalment.
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