Sunday, 2 August 2015

When God Was a Rabbit - Childhood makes us what we are

When God Was a Rabbit, by Sara Winman is the intimate story of the Portman family from the perspective of the youngest member, Elly. Born in 1968, we meet her when she is very young and she develops a friendship with the old man next door which goes on to affect her whole life. We see her grow older and find that she worships her brother Joe, but does not make friends easily, except with her rabbit, which she names God, and the irrepressible Jenny Penny, who bursts into her life one day at school. Elly and Jenny share everything ... well, almost everything. When the Portman's win a fortune, the family up sticks and move to the countryside. When Jenny suddenly stops communicating with Elly, she is devastated. We move forward in time, with the Portman's gathering unusual friends along the way who become part of an extended family. Joe is now working on the other side of the Atlantic and still seems unhappy. When Elly receives a letter out of the blue from Jenny, we find out what has happened to her. Can their friendship be rekindled? Will Joe and Elly ever be happy? This is a strong, but intimate story, beautifully written, about family, friendship, love and loss. I read the audio edition, narrated by the author herself, which I felt worked very well - I suppose it helps that she is an actress! It is heart-breaking and funny by equal measure and I can heartily recommend it. Personally, I felt that the ending was a little strung out and could have been rounded up a little quicker, but that is only a minor point.

My STAR rating: FOUR.

Length: 352 print pages.
Price I paid: £7.99.
Formats available: print; unabridged audio download; ebook.

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