How to Grow a Family Tree

Eliza Henry-Jones

How to Grow a Family Tree
Format
Paperback
Publisher
HarperCollins Publishers (Australia) Pty Ltd
Country
Australia
Published
23 March 2020
Pages
336
ISBN
9781460754955

How to Grow a Family Tree

Eliza Henry-Jones

From the author of P is for Pearl comes a heart-warming book about family, friendship and what home can mean.

Stella may only be seventeen, but having read every self-help book she can find means she knows a thing or two about helping people. She sure wasn’t expecting to be the one in need of help, though.

 Thanks to her father’s gambling addiction, Stella and her family now find themselves living at Fairyland Caravan Park. And hiding this truth from her friends is hard enough without dealing with another secret. Stella’s birth mother has sent her a letter.

 As Stella deals with the chaos of her family, she must also confront the secrets and past of her ‘other’ family. But Stella is stronger than she realises. 

Review

As with P is for Pearl, Eliza Henry-Jones’s latest young adult novel How to Grow a Family Tree tells the story of a seventeen-year-old girl and the emotional struggles brought on by a family in crisis. In her trademark style, Henry-Jones draws on her background in psychology in creating an authentic experience for Stella, the protagonist of this work. This is an emotionally complex story with a myriad of pressure points at play.

Stella’s family are struggling to come to terms with their changed financial circumstances brought on by the father’s gambling addiction. Being forced to move out of the family home to the local caravan park is a point of shame and much social angst for Stella and her sister Taylor. For too long, the sisters have had to reconcile themselves to the family’s diminishing assets as their father sold off anything of value to finance his gambling addiction. The family home was the last thing to go. But this isn’t Stella’s only concern. A surprise letter from her biological mother seeking connection is in itself destabilising and, even though Stella knew her own adoption story, this couldn’t have come at a more confusing time.

The complexity of one’s relationship to home and family are of central concern in this emotionally challenging work. But Stella proves a stoic and resilient teenager, if not an endearing one given her predilection for self-help books and the pop-psychological support they offer her. As when, justifying her point that she’s not as angry as her sister, she makes amusing use of a newly learnt psychological concept, remarking: ‘I suppose I’m a lot more actualised than Taylor’. This is a sensitive story about the things that break people and the strength and resources they draw upon to start over.


Natalie Platten is the assistant manager and children’s book buyer at Readings Doncaster.

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