Book Description
for Flying Up the Mountain by Elizabeth-Irene Baitie
From Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC)
Ato (Black) lives in West Africa and is making a long-coveted trip to Nnoma, an island established as an environmental sanctuary. Allowing visitors again after a long hiatus, Nnoma invites groups of kids for week-long stays during which they compete in environmentally themed challenges, with those on the top three teams given the honor of being named Asofa, earth protectors, at week’s end. The island’s Guardians, who run the activities, are adults who were among the first Asofa. Ato desperately wants to be named Asofa. But he also hopes to use his time on the island to find a message that his dad, who died when Ato was young and who was involved in the creation of Nnoma, supposedly left there for Ato. Friction between the two girls on Ato’s team, and between Ato and a boy on another team, is already hindering his progress toward these goals when Ato discovers the future of Nnoma is in jeopardy: One or more of the Guardians is conspiring with developers to mine the island’s resources. Thwarting these nefarious plans becomes the most important mission of all in this mystery-adventure from a Ghanaian author. The young characters’ knowledge and enthusiasm for protecting the environment is inspiring, while friendship dynamics and tensions ground them as refreshingly relatable. (Ages 8-11)
CCBC Choices 2024. © Cooperative Children's Book Center, Univ. of Wisconsin - Madison, 2024. Used with permission.