Butterfly Girl
Ashling Kwok author Arielle Li illustrator
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Exisle Publishing
Published:10th Oct '23
Should be back in stock very soon
Olivia moves to the city and leaves her butterfly friends behind. But with no garden, how will Olivia find new friends?
Olivia’s only friends are butterflies. When Olivia and her mother move from the countryside, Olivia must leave her fluttering friends behind. ‘You’ll make new friends,’ her mother reassures her — but no butterflies visit Olivia’s balcony. Olivia will need to transform her new environment if she wants to see her friends again.
Olivia and her butterfly friends spend all of their time together, until one day everything changes, and Olivia and her mother move to an apartment in the city.
Olivia is heartbroken because she doesn’t want to leave her butterfly friends behind but her mother assures her that she will make new friends in the city.
When Olivia and her mum arrive in the city, it’s so grey and gloomy that everyone is sheltering inside. Olivia waits for new friends to come and play but no -one appears.
So Olivia stands on her empty concrete apartment balcony and calls out to her butterfly friends — because they always come when she needs them. But this time, even her butterfly friends don’t appear.
Then Olivia remembers that butterflies need colourful nectar plants, a puddle pool and rocks to rest their wings on, but Olivia doesn’t have a garden anymore so she decides to build a butterfly balcony garden using whatever she can find. Olivia waits and waits and waits but her butterflies stay away.
Just as Olivia is about to lose hope, a gust of wind blows flowers from her balcony garden across the grey sky and onto her neighbours’ balconies. People of all ages and cultural ethnicities appear on their balconies to pick up the flowers, and Olivia suddenly knows exactly what she needs to do to attract (human and butterfly) friends.
“Arielle Li’s pictures capture the spirit of this charming story. Her city is a grim bank of drab-]coloured skyscrapers, with Olivia’s balcony forming a bright beacon of flowers. She has also painted thousands of butterflies.” - The Source Review
“Her latest book helps kids understand that loneliness and the need for friendship crosses all age groups and cultural boundaries, and that a sense of community comes from the joy of nurturing nature around us and taking the time to connect with each other.” - Sunday Star Times
“a pleasant inspiring read which would make a good addition to your nature themed library.”- Armadillo Magazine | active book blog
“Celebrates the beauty of butterflies and nature. Butterflies are popular with children and this story is sure to be too.” - Buzz Words
“Ashley Kwok’s text is perfectly suited to the ebb and flow of Olivia’s experience, and Arielle Li’s gorgeous pastel illustrations are exactly right for the mood of the story. Altogether, it is both charming and valuable in a teaching context as well as for pure personal enjoyment, and I highly recommend it to you for Littles from around 4 years upwards.”- Just So Stories
“Butterfly Girl is a charming and sensitively illustrated book about friendship and making space for animals, even in an urban environment.” - Tomorrow’s Schools Today
“Butterfly Girl is a story that can help young children feel positive about their capacity to manage change and to influence their own environment, an idea that is increasingly important to explore in light of the profound environmental challenges facing the world.” - Picture Book Parents
ISBN: 9781922539564
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
32 pages