About this item
Highlights
- I first noticed a grey warbler fledgling outside my window who couldn't get the tune quite right.
- Author(s): Helen Mae Innes
- 80 Pages
- Family + Relationships, Death, Grief, Bereavement
Description
About the Book
A surprisingly joyful, hopeful little story about the power of nature, and specifically birds, to heal us when we are hurt. After losing a child the narrator finds herself drawn to the birds of the New Zealand bush and their songs.
Book Synopsis
I first noticed a grey warbler fledgling outside my window who couldn't get the tune quite right. He'd start singing, get a note wrong and falter, then try tentatively again. Like a child learning the recorder, I thought.
Like a child...
Into the Woods is a surprisingly joyful, hopeful little story about the power of nature, and specifically birds, to heal us when we are hurt. The narrator has lost a child and in the fog of grief that surrounds her she finds herself drawn to the birds of the New Zealand bush and their songs. She overcomes a phobia of birds to make connections with the wildlife around her and ultimately to make connections again with the people she loves. Beautifully written and honestly raw emotions make this a powerful read.
Review Quotes
'A funny, painful, powerful story about the strange ways grief moves through us. Helen's path of recovery, from a bed she doesn't want to leave towards a natural world she doesn't know, is full of recognisable difficulties and unlikely connections. This frank and bracing little book has a bass note of personal tragedy but a top note of surprising joy.'
Damien Wilkins