Book description
One disaffected administrator, one disenchanted teenager, four hundred and twenty-one vegan extremists, sixty trucks, and nine hundred thousand grumpy layer hens awaiting liberation. In barns. Six barns. No, wait, seven. No, wait ...
Two auditors for the US egg industry conceive a plot to liberate an entire egg farm's worthā¦
Why read it?
2 authors picked Barn 8 as one of their favorite books. Why do they recommend it?
In most stories, animals donāt exist for their own reasonsātheir purpose is simply to serve the needs of the main characters or the machinations of the plot. In Barn 8, however, chickens not only have agency and their own raison dāetre, but they catalyze every single major turn of events.
I love the premiseāa group of unlikely activists decides to free the million-plus chickens suffering on an egg farmāand its quirky, clever style. But the best part is the chickens at the heart of the tale. Unferth gets inside their heads, showing their loyalty and love, their distinctive personalities,ā¦
From Meredith's list on make you wish you could talk to animals.
What I love about Barn 8 is that it focuses as much, if not more, on the animals as on their human rescuers. The novelās portrayal of chickensātheir history, heritage, tortured present, and imagined futureāis a celebration of them as individual beings rather than merely egg makers (āChickens gossip, summon, play, flirt, teach, warn, mourn, fight, praise, and promiseā). And, along with the chicken charactersāincluding the individual bird that inspired the rescueāthe human characters are engaging and relatable, with their own complex stories. The myriad points of view (including interview-style chapters) keep the pages turning in a novel that isā¦
From Midge's list on saving animals.
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