After eleven-year-old Kimeto saves a baby elephant from an abandoned well, he begins a trek to Nairobi to find her.

I’m grateful to Nigerian graphic artist Oladimeiji Alana and Kenyan sensitivity reader Jean Wandimi for their invaluable assistance in creating my first ever middle grade novel.

Details

Topics

coming of age, family, elephants, conservation, HIV/AIDS


Pages

103


Age

8-12 years

“While watching over his family’s cattle grazing on Kenyan rangelands, eleven-year-old Kimeto spots a leather strap hanging from an acacia tree, a sure sign of a poacher’s snare. The next morning on their way to school, he and his two younger sisters come across the carcass of a large elephant. Splashing noises nearby lead them to a baby elephant struggling to escape the muddy red waters of a steep-sided well. Despite the potential danger to himself, Kimeto slips in to help. As he comforts the baby elephant, he begins to bond with her. When two park rangers finally arrive, the three of them manage to rescue the elephant calf. What will happen to her next? Has Kimeto made her life better–or worse?

The bulk of this middle grade (ages 8-14) coming-of-age novel documents Kimeto’s journey to the wildlife sanctuary in Nairobi to find out the little elephant’s fate. Along the way, the reader is given a fascinating glimpse into the Kenyan cultural landscape. The juxtaposition of the traditional way of life of the rural Maasai against modern-day perils in the big city makes a compelling story as it introduces and explores tough realities such as orphaned children with HIV, youth gangs, poverty, and government and institutional corruption. Through his journey, Kimeto’s initial, modest longing simply to be able to go to school blossoms into a dream with a much deeper calling.” – SaskBooks Review

Read full review here: https://reviews.skbooks.com/kimetos-journey/