Synopsis:
'If Finn Maison shouts jump you jump or you are dead.'
Twelve-year-old
Willem has Aspergers Syndrome and two main aims in life: to fly and to
make at least two friends of his own age. But all the other boys from
the Beckham Estate do is make him jump off things. First his desk - and
now the wall. As his toes teeter on the edge, Sasha Barton gives him a
tiny little wink. Might she become his friend?
Bullied by Finn
and his gang the Beckham Estate Boyz, Willem has no choice but to jump.
As he flies through the air he flaps his arms, wishing he could fly and
escape into the clouds. Instead he comes crashing down and breaks his
ankle.
Sasha, angry with herself for not stopping Finn and his
Boyz, is determined to put things right. And soon, while the gangs riot
on their estate, Willem and Sasha form an unlikely friendship. Because
they share a secret. Sasha longs to fly too.
And when Magic Man
Archie arrives with stories of war-flying spitfires, he will change the
lives of the kids on the Beckham Estate for ever. And perhaps find a way
for Willem and Sasha to fly ...
Touching on themes such as
friendship and bullying, this is a charming tale about overcoming
obstacles and finding friendship in unlikely places.
Review:
I got this ebook from Netgalley in return of an honest review.
As usual when it comes to Netgalley titles, I took a sort of leap of faith with this book. I had never heard of the book or the author, and now that I read it I realise how sad that actually is and how determined I am to change that.
The first thing I noticed when I first started the book was how engaging it is. From the first sentence we do feel like we are the main characters for a little bit, we understand them and we grow to love them. My favourite part of my reading experience was definitely how attached I got to every character and how tender and warm I felt inside while reading about them.
Jane Elson was able to create real and wonderful characters with such lovely stories that help us appreciate the little thing we take for granted and how easy it is to do that for other people. Willem was definitely my favourite example of this. To me, while reading How to Fly with Broken Wings, he wasn't a character, he was a child that taught me that to live a beautiful life we don't need a lot, just enough friends and maybe an airplane or two. His happiness was the most important thing to me during my reading experience and I had to cheer for him in every single page. It was fantastic how Elson was able to use his point of view as a way of changing every other character around him for the best despite (and maybe because) of his condition.
That is my next point. With simple yet wonderful writing Jane Elson created the perfect book for younger kids who are now realising how many different types of friends one can get and how each one of them has a story to tell and a way to change ours if we let them, for better or for worse. It's also an astonishing way for those kids to understand, maybe for the first time, what it's like to have the brain of a child with Aspergers Syndrome, someone who thinks in peculiar but similarly incredible ways.
There are many more merits we can award this book, but only by reading it can we actually feel its soul, and there is plenty of it.
I absolutely recommend this heart-warming, inspiring book, especially to little kids finding out about a world they don't yet completely understand. A fantastic, sensational, quick read.