Wish in a Tree, Lynda Mullaly Hunt
Wish in a Tree, Lynda Mullaly Hunt
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Wish in a Tree

Author: Lynda Mullaly Hunt

Narrator: Alexandra Ryan

Unabridged: 9 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 05/20/2025


Synopsis

An uplifting audiobook celebrating neurodiversity, starring characters from Lynda Mullaly Hunt's New York Times bestselling novel Fish in a Tree

Oliver’s brain is a volcano of ideas—always bubbling with questions. This makes it hard to focus at school, and sometimes he worries he won’t ever fit in there. So it’s a good thing he has a friend who reminds him that great minds don’t think alike. And that a brain that blazes with curiosity and imagination is a glorious thing. This uplifting audiobook celebrates out-of-the-box thinking, the power of creativity, and the importance of being proud of the things that set us apart.

About The Author

Lynda Mullaly Hunt (lyndamullalyhunt.com) is the author of New York Times bestseller Fish in a Tree, Bank Street Best Book One for the Murphys, and Indie Bestseller Shouting at the Rain. A former teacher, she lives in Massachusetts.Nancy Carpenter (nancycarpenter.website) has illustrated sixty books for children, including Balderdash (by Michelle Markel), a Sibert honor book, and A Letter to My Teacher (by Deborah Hopkinson). She's received two Christopher Awards and the Jane Addams Children's Book Award. She lives with her family in Brooklyn, New York.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Mrs on December 10, 2024

LOVE this one and it'll be a pre-order for sure! Love the layers to this one and it's a book that would be great to read to kids of all ages and to think about the conversations that could come out of this! Great descriptions of how his brain "feels" and what kinds of things he's thinking about.......more

Goodreads review by Kim on March 17, 2025

LOVE this book! As a teacher, as a mom, and as a human. Scored a copy at NCTE in Boston this year for my kindergartener at home, and was very pleasantly surprised at how useful it’s been as a supplement to Fish in a Tree in my 4th grade classroom. An excellent message and story with the characters w......more


Quotes

“Oliver, a neurodivergent child introduced in Hunt’s novel Fish in a Tree (2015), makes his picture-book debut. . . . While his classmates work quietly, he fidgets and involuntarily makes noises. His brain ‘blazes.’ He imagines his pencil as a rocket, and his mind fills with questions: Could a pencil rocket reach Saturn’s rings? Shay, the class bully, calls him ‘weird’ and ‘lazy,’ unlike ‘the rest of us’—but the things Oliver says to himself hurt even more. At recess, Oliver makes a wish: ‘Please…please make me more like the rest of them.’ Fortunately, not everyone is like Shay. Jada’s impressed by Oliver’s knowledge of ants, and Albert reminds him that famous inventors, scientists, and artists persisted despite being mocked. . . . Cheered, Oliver dubs Jada and Albert his ‘colony’: ‘In an ant colony, everyone matters.’ . . . Readers, especially those with learning differences, will appreciate the message that, like a tree with colorful autumn leaves, the world is ‘most beautiful’ when people are all different. Energetic cartoon illustrations cleverly convey Oliver’s vivid imagination as well as his emotions. . . . Affirming and uplifting.” —Kirkus Reviews

“Based on characters from Hunt’s best-selling middle-grade novel Fish in a Tree, this picture book brings neurodiversity to a younger audience. While his peers sit still in their desks, completing their assignments dutifully, Oliver fidgets and his “brain blazes” as he imagines his yellow No. 2 pencil as a rocket and questions zoom around his thoughts. Digitally enhanced photo-collage illustrations that feature childlike doodles and school-themed media, such as finger paint, a variety of writing papers, and real school supplies, relate Oliver’s unspecified disorder and the isolation he feels after classmate Shay taunts him. Like the original novel, this story uses a metaphor to help readers understand and appreciate Oliver’s unique way of thinking. In this case, it’s his love of ants and how they all have a colony in which they belong. . . . Once again, Hunt encourages compassion and self-acceptance in all readers.” —Booklist