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Liberty Biscuit

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Does a family mystery stand in the way of saving Kip's best friend?

Katherine Pearl Baker—"Kip" for short—is the only child on her family's rural peach farm. She longs for a pet to ease the loneliness. Unfortunately, her father has an angry opposition to all animals—horses in particular. Why he dislikes them is a confounding mystery.

Hiding in the woods on the Fourth of July, Kip encounters a bedraggled donkey with one eye and a floppy ear. Immediately smitten and compelled to protect him, she feeds him biscuits and takes him home. When it is discovered the donkey fled an abusive owner, Kip's father finally relents, reluctantly allowing him to stay.

Kip is elated when her grandfather agrees to help her foster the donkey, who she names "Liberty Biscuit," along with two emaciated horses removed by the local sheriff from the same home, as the cruelty case goes to court. While caring for the animals, Kip's happiness is overshadowed by a shocking discovery in a trunk in the family farm's hayloft—a faded photograph of her father as a boy that reveals secrets long kept.

A court order to return the horses, and even worse, Kip's beloved Liberty Biscuit, to the owner who had starved and beaten them, throws Kip's world into turmoil. She knows she must find a way to keep them, or she will have betrayed the best friend she has ever had. But saving the animals means risking the complete unraveling of her family as she exposes the long-buried truth about a tragic accident and a hurt like she's never known before.

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    • Kirkus

      September 15, 2022
      Katherine "Kip" Pearl's Grandpa Joe was the finest horse trainer in Georgia, and he passed down his love of horses to her. While she has grown up on his family's peach farm, Kip's dad has forbidden pets of any kind, including horses, for reasons he won't share. On the Fourth of July, Kip finds a one-eyed white donkey in bad shape in the woods and lures him home with her peach biscuits. Her family discovers that this donkey and two starving horses were recently seized from an abusive home. Despite her dad's objections, Grandpa Joe decides he and Kip should foster the animals while waiting for the court case to decide their fate. Kip falls in love immediately with the donkey she names Liberty Biscuit, and when the judge rules in the owner's favor and orders the animals to be returned, Kip promises to do everything she can to get them back. Thirteen-year-old Kip's voice feels inconsistent for her age, oscillating between sounding very young and much older. Kip's mom's side of the family is Black, and her dad and his family are White. While Bowles states in the acknowledgments that this novel was born out of a desire to normalize mixed-race families like her daughter's, the conversations about race are superficial, and their delivery and placement in the story feel stilted and forced. Despite these limitations, Kip's story is heartwarming. Animal lovers will appreciate many aspects of this gentle tale. (Fiction. 9-13)

      COPYRIGHT(2022) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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