After a pair of farmers whose land is no longer productive let it go wild, both farm and wildlife flourish.
This hopeful tale is based on the author’s own experience, recounted for adults in Wilding (2019), of rewilding the lands around Knepp Castle, in England. Here, Nancy and Jake, an imagined interracial couple, are unhappy farmers burdened with debt for heavy equipment and chemical fertilizers and pesticides, as many farmers are. Their land is soggy and their animals, sad. Spurred by a brochure advertising safari trips to Africa, they decide to make their own wilderness. They wait—for only the length of a single spread—and, without the constant disruption of modern farming methods, the former farm sees the return of brambles, wildflowers, insects, and birds. Nightingales, migrating from Africa, return to sing. Neighbors object of course, but they are convinced of Nancy and Jake’s wisdom when a flood is averted due to the land’s new ability to absorb and retain stormwater. In Tee’s line-and-color illustrations the sad faces of the farmers and their animals become happy; flowers and birds abound. A final spread shows a charming English village now gone wild as well, with flowers and bushes replacing sedate lawn and pavement, storks nesting on a chimney, and a bountiful display outside a produce shop. The straightforward storytelling and exuberant illustrations should work well for group read-alouds. The author’s note includes photographs.
Not nearly as easy as it looks—but inspiring.
(Picture book. 4-8)