47 pages • 1 hour read
Michael Morpurgo is both the author of the novel and the novel’s protagonist. In the novel’s first-person perspective, an adult Morpurgo recalls the events of his childhood in Wiltshire. Morpurgo’s childhood is in turn a frame story for the embedded narrative about Bertie, Millie, and their white lion.
Morpurgo was inspired to write the novel by several real-world encounters and events (see Background); however, the novel itself is fiction.
As a boy, Michael is, “more miserable than I had ever been before” (8) at the novel’s opening. He is stuck at boarding school in Wiltshire, away from home, his mother, and London. He faces a bully named Basher Beaumont, and a teacher named Mr. Carter, who tortures him for poor spelling. Michael decides to run away and catch the train to London. He flees in the rain on a Sunday afternoon, but a car startles him through a gate and into the yard of Millie Andrews, who invites him to tea. She tells him a long story about her life with Bertie and the lion, and then returns him to school where he learns that the real Millie Andrews died roughly a decade earlier.
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By Michael Morpurgo
Action & Adventure
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Animals in Literature
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Coming-of-Age Journeys
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Friendship
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Juvenile Literature
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Loyalty & Betrayal
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Memory
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Mortality & Death
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War
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