The Year the Maps Changed

by Danielle Binks

Paperback, 2020

Status

Available

Barcode

25459

Publication

Hachette Australia Pty Ltd, (2020), 310 pages

Description

Juvenile Fiction. Juvenile Literature. HTML: Wolf Hollow meets The Thing About Jellyfish in Danielle Binks's debut middle grade novel set in 1999, where a twelve-year-old girl grapples with the meaning of home and family amidst a refugee crisis that has divided her town. "Timeless and beautiful, and it deserves to be read by people of all ages." �??Printz Award-winning author Melina Marchetta If you asked eleven-year-old Fred to draw a map of her family, it would be a bit confusing. Her birth father was never in the picture, her mom died years ago, and her stepfather, Luca, is now expecting a baby with his new girlfriend. According to Fred's teacher, maps don't always give the full picture of our history, but more and more it feels like Fred's family is redrawing the line of their story . . . and Fred is feeling left off the map. Soon after learning about the baby, Fred hears that the town will be taking in hundreds of refugees seeking safety from a war-torn Kosovo. Some people in town, like Luca, think it's great and want to help. Others, however, feel differently, causing friction within the community. Fred, who has been trying to navigate her own feelings of displacement, ends up befriending a few refugees. But what starts as a few friendly words in Albanian will soon change their lives forever, not to mention completely redrawing Fred's personal map of friends, family, and home, and community.… (more)

Local notes

Kirkus Review, 08/31/2022
It’s 1999 in a sleepy town in Victoria, Australia, and Winifred’s life is about to change. Fred, 11, has been raised by her caring police officer stepfather, Luca, and beloved maternal grandfather, Pop, since her mother died when she was 6. Now, Luca brings Anika and her 10-year-old son, Sam, into their lives. Worse, a new baby is on the way, and Sam ends up in Fred's class when their tiny school combines grades. Fred’s favorite teacher, Mr. Khouri, who emphasizes the human aspects of geography, becomes an important character as the book moves beyond the scope of the single family. The students receive a firsthand geography lesson when Australia accepts Kosovar Albanian refugees from war-torn former Yugoslavia but forces them to stay in a remote quarantine station. Some locals welcome the newcomers; others don’t. Fred becomes involved with several of the arrivals, including Nora, a pregnant woman who shares a hospital room with Anika. Nora’s character gains strength as the book unfolds and she fights for her and her unborn child’s rights to stay after the Australian government decides to send the asylum seekers back. Each of the adults and children who become supporters of the refugees are heroic in their own ways. This work will resonate as similar situations arise today and citizens take action against their governments’ refugee policies. Fred is White; the multiethnic supporting cast reflects Australia’s immigrant history. A poignant, emotional coming-of-age story.

Awards

The Readings Prize (Shortlist — Children's — 2021)
The Indie Book Award (Longlist — 2021)
Prime Minister's Literary Award (Shortlist — Children's Fiction — 2021)
Page: 0.9083 seconds