The Year I Flew Away by Marie Arnold
The Year I Flew Away (2021), by Marie Arnold, combines the timelessness of a fairy tale with the timeliness of the immigrant experience, all while being set in the 1980s amidst Whitney Houston and Prince. It’s a charming middle-grade novel full of heart and humor.
Gabrielle is a young girl living in Haiti; though she’s poor, she’s surrounded by family and friends. One day her parents have big news: Gabrielle is going to America to live with her aunt and uncle. She has to go alone, though, because of issues with her parents’ paperwork.
Gabrielle thought America would be heaven, but instead she finds herself terribly lonely; the other kids make fun of her and leave her out. And when her uncle and aunt take her to their respective workplaces, she learns that they have to deal with bigots on a daily basis. Gabrielle feels like she’ll never be “American enough” to fit in. And it so happens that there’s a witch hanging around — one who offers Gabrielle three wishes, for a price.
The desperation that drives Gabrielle to accept the witch’s bargain is poignant, as are the unintended consequences of her wishes. When one of the wishes lands her family in danger, she’ll need to team up with some new friends to set things right. And she and her peers will all have to learn that their diversity is what makes life rich.
There’s something that happens at the end of the story that, if it happened in real life, would cause a lot of people to be very worried for a long time, and instead everyone seems to just take it in stride, which made me scratch my head a bit. I think it’s possible it’s not meant to be literal, but it’s not clear. I’m not sure this plot point would faze a kid, though — sometimes an adult-brain overthinks things in children’s books!
I would not hesitate to recommend The Year I Flew Away to young readers. It’s beautifully written, it’s funny, it’s adorable, and it carries an important message. Kids who’ve had experiences like Gabrielle’s will easily relate to her; kids who haven’t had these experiences will find the story accessible because of the engaging voice and the fairy-tale elements, and learn something along the way.
It sounds good!
It LOOKS good!