A Deeply Moving Story About Belonging and Identity: Review of How to Grow a Family Tree by Eliza Henry Jones

A Deeply Moving Story About Belonging and Identity: Review of How to Grow a Family Tree by Eliza Henry Jones

From the author of P is for Pearl comes a heart-warming book about family, friendship and what home can mean.

When 17-year-old Stella and her family find themselves living in ‘Fairyland’, a caravan park with a dubious reputation, she isn’t keen to let her friends know about the move. Her dad has been on a downward slide since he lost his job and his gambling addiction has left them with no choice but to leave their home and ‘downsize’.

This isn’t the only thing that’s weighing on Stella’s mind. She has received a letter from her birth mother and can’t bring herself to open it – she’s been carrying it around for weeks. Fortunately, she has friends Clem, Lara and Zin and her sister Taylor to look out for her, along with all the advice from self-help books she has acquired.

Stella’s hobby is reading self-help books in order to live her best life and become her best self but that’s not working out as planned. Yet she is determined to use her ‘book’ knowledge to help others in Fairyland who clearly just need a few pointers to get back on track. She’s about to learn that nothing is as simple as it appears in her books.

As Stella tries to deal with the chaos of her family, she must also confront her ‘other’ family and the troubling secrets that threaten to overwhelm her. Dealing with themes around family, identity, addiction, trauma, friendship, mental health, love and growing up, How to Grow a Family Tree is a deeply moving story about belonging and identity.

Recommended for ages: 14+, your teens are going to relate to these well-developed characters regardless of their circumstances as Australian author Eliza Henry Jones skilfully portrays the intensity of teenage friendships with insight and understanding. Her qualifications in psychology, grief, loss and trauma counselling are evident throughout.

As we all know, families come in all shapes and sizes and all have their own set of unique problems. How to Grow a Family Tree encourages understanding and acceptance of this.

It’s also quite simply a great read. As a parent with a young teen it was a reminder about the importance of communication and that teens are heading into the unknown and often still need someone to hold their hand. I thoroughly enjoyed this and have passed it on to the teen in the house to devour!

 

Reviews

Family, Friendship and Home: Read an Extract from How to Grow a Family Tree by Eliza Henry Jones

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Publisher details

How to Grow a Family Tree
Author
Eliza Henry Jones
Publisher
HarperCollins
Genre
Children’s Fiction
Released
23 March, 2020
ISBN
9781460754955

Synopsis

From the author of P is for Pearl comes a heart-warming book about family, friendship and what home can mean.Stella may only be seventeen, but having read every self-help book she can find means she knows a thing or two about helping people. She sure wasn't expecting to be the one in need of help, though.Thanks to her father's gambling addiction, Stella and her family now find themselves living at Fairyland Caravan Park. And hiding this truth from her friends is hard enough without dealing with another secret. Stella's birth mother has sent her a letter.As Stella deals with the chaos of her family, she must also confront the secrets and past of her 'other' family. But Stella is stronger than she realises.From the author of P is for Pearl comes a heart-warming book about family, friendship and what home can mean.E
Eliza Henry Jones
About the author

Eliza Henry Jones

Eliza was born in Melbourne in 1990. She was a young Writer-in-Residence at the Katharine Susannah Prichard Writers' Centre in 2012 and was a recipient of a Varuna residential fellowship for 2015. She has qualifications in English, psychology and grief, loss and trauma counselling. She is currently completing honours in creative writing - exploring bushfire trauma - and works in community services. She lives in the Dandenong Ranges with her husband and too many animals. In The Quiet was her debut novel.

Books by Eliza Henry Jones

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