The Butterfly Lion

First edition

The Butterfly Lion is a children's novel by Michael Morpurgo. It was first published in Great Britain by Collins publishers in 1996. It won the 1996 Smarties book prize.[1] The book was adapted into a stage play by Daniel Buckroyd of the Mercury Theatre Colchester, and is touring the UK in 2013.

Michael Morpurgo has said that, of those he has written, this is one of his favourite books.[2]

Plot summary

A young boy runs away from a boarding school in Wiltshire. He meets an old woman (Millie), who tells him the story of Bertie and the butterfly lion. When living in Africa, Bertie rescued a white lion cub, but was forced to part with it when he went to boarding school and the lion was sold to a circus. Bertie promises to find the lion one day. At boarding school, he sneaks away every day and becomes best friends with the young Millie.

Later, when fighting in France in the First World War, (where he saves two men and is given a Victoria Cross) Bertie is reunited with the lion.

He marries Millie and brings the lion back to England, where they live happily for many years. When the lion died, Bertie and Millie carved a lion out of the chalk in the hillside in memorial, before Bertie died himself.

After being told the story, Michael returns to school. He finds a plaque commemorating Bertie's heroic acts in the war, and learns from a teacher that Millie died only a few months after Bertie. Michael goes back to the house, finding it deserted.

He then hears Millie's voice asking him to look after the chalk lion.

he runs away from his boarding school and meets a girl and they fly a kite but it gets stuck in the tree

later on in the story the lion cub gets sent to the circus by a french man his mother is very ill and can't look after him but he finds away to get back to africa and save his lion that he grew up with.

Main characters

References

  1. The Houghton Mifflin Dictionary of Biography. Houghton Mifflin. 2003. p. 1087. ISBN 978-0-618-25210-7.
  2. "About Michael Morpurgo".


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