
Book Details:
Author: Alison Bellringer
Release Date: 26 April 2024Series:
Genre: Middle Grade Fiction
Format: E-book
Pages: 75 pages
Publisher: Austin Macauley Publishers
Blurb:
Britney is a young, extremely malnourished child, who comes from a poor family with an abusive father. Her mother does everything she can to protect her daughter from her husband, receiving the brunt of the aggressive beatings herself. The girl barely speaks, afraid of being overheard by the wrong person, and the only words she knows are the few repeated words her mother uses to calm her after a fight. A total of three words in all, namely – Whisper, Britney, and Ma. There is a very private, sheltered spot in the nearby forest which Britney uses as a place to hide away if ever her mother has to spend the day walking into the nearest town to
purchase supplies or to trade goods. They have discreet, non-verbal signals which they use to keep the area hidden and make sure that Britney is secure (far away from Pa’s prying eyes). On one such day, Britney hears unusual sounds and is terrified that her father has found out about their system, but the surprise turns out to be just a lonesome little puppy. The girl quickly becomes friends with the stray, instantly joining forces in their solitude, only ever meeting in the secret place where they share such a deeply silent, unspoken bond. This continues until Ma helps her only child run away for good, tearfully leaving Britney to fend for herself in the best way she knows how. The adoring puppy (promptly being referred to as Whisper) unexpectedly follows the girl, and together they set off on a journey that will forever change their lives…
Review
Whisper by Alison Bellringer is a beautiful story that opens softly and still manages to break your heart, and then carefully put it back together. Told from the POV of Britney, a malnourished little girl living with an abusive father, the novel traces her journey from fear and secrecy to safety, found family, and, slowly, trust. The book’s gentleness comes from an unlikely guardian: a stray puppy Britney names Whisper, whose steadfast presence changes the course of her life.
From the gut-punch opening in the cottage, to the quiet, sacred ritual of a secret forest hideaway, and the puppy who finds her there, Author Bellringer writes with unshowy clarity that lets emotion land without melodrama. Scenes like Whisper fetching help and leading a kind carpenter to the collapsed child (and the warm safety of Grandma Ruby’s hearth) feel cinematic yet grounded, the sort of moments young readers cling to when they need proof that good adults exist.
What I loved most is how the book treats healing as a slow, layered process. Britney’s vocabulary at first is just three words and the narrative mirrors that tentative expansion of self. As she grows, the world widens and there is the complicated arrival of people from her past. The author doesn’t sanitize trauma, but she centers resilience and community, showing how patience, consistency, and everyday kindness knit a life back together.
Parents, teachers, and librarians will appreciate how the book handles tough themes with care like domestic violence, abandonment, and a nuanced strand of possible redemption, while keeping the focus on safety, boundaries, and support. The tone is middle-grade friendly, but I’d still suggest guided reading for sensitive readers; it invites valuable conversations about speaking up, trusting safe adults, and what real change looks like.