Cover Image: A Funeral for an Owl

A Funeral for an Owl

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Member Reviews

Jim Stevens didn't grow up in a comfortable middle-class home, much less a wealthy one. No one would have predicted that he would grow up to be a teacher in the same school he went to. With his father gone and his brother lost to gangs and drugs, Jim and his mother lived in a project. Jim was determined not to go the same route as his brother so he spent his time on his hobby, bird-watching, and drawing the birds he saw.

One day while out and about, he met Aimee, a girl who came from the upscale neighborhood on the other side of the railroad tracks. The two develop a friendship and he teaches her about the birds, especially the owls. Aimee claims a white owl as her personal totem. When she disappears, no one can explain why she left or where she was and the case was never solved.

Now as an adult, Jim tries to look out for the children in his class in whom he sees the same spark he had. Shamayal Thomas is one of those. When Jim sees him out roaming the streets in the rain at 3 a.m., he throws the academic rules aside and takes him home to feed him and warm him up. He learns that Shamayal lives with an alcoholic father who doesn't take care of him and often beats him. Shamayal has also run afoul of the gangs in the neighborhood.

Ayisha Emmanuelle is another teacher at the school. When Jim is knifed in a fight at school and ends up at the hospital, she uncovers the story of Shamayal and how Jim is helping him. Afraid for her job but also full of pity for the boy and Jim, she takes over the care of Shamayal.

This is my first read of this author. Like Jim, Jane Davis loves photography. Her books center around people who are facing moral dilemmas and how they act in these situations. I listened to this novel and the narrator did an excellent job on each character, especially Shamayal whose streetwise outlook is accurately portrayed.
This book will leave the reader wondering about what happened to Aimee in the past and what will happen to Jim, Ayisha and Shamayal in the present. It is recommended for readers of literary fiction.

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Because of my love for owls, I was drawn to this title. With multiple narrators and a dual timeline, this is something of a found family story. Jim and Ayesha are both teachers at the same school. 14-year-old Shamayal lives in the same low income apartment complex that Jim grew up in. Out late one evening, Jim sees Shamayal out in the rain. Though the school's polices prohibit him from interacting with the boy, he offers him a lift - and once he learns more about Shamayal's personal life, he continues to break the rules and grows closer to the young man. But when schoolyard violence turns deadly, Jim ends up in the hospital. The incident draws Ayesha in and soon she also cares for the boy. Meanwhile, Jim looks back on the defining summer of his life- sharing the story with them both as well as his love for birds. At 12, Jim started bird-watching which led him to meet Aimee.

It's an engaging story that thrusts the listener in from the very start. The audio is well-performed and I really grew to life all of the characters. Shamayal and Bins especially steal the scenes they are in. And while Ayesha is a bit unlikable at first, she too, grows on you. The ending was actually unexpected - and I wish that there had been even more to it than there was... although not wanting the book to end is a good sign, really.

This is my first experience with this author and I'll definitely be keeping my eye out for more from her in the future. The characters feel lifelike and this book evokes a wide range of emotions. I really enjoyed listening to it!

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Excellent audiobook, something a bit different from my usual listens and I loved it.

Thanks to Netgalley and the publishers for letting me access an advance copy of this audiobook in exchange for my feedback.

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Thank you to @netgalley @sagaegmont for the ALC in the return for my honest review.
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My thoughts…
Lyrical. This is my first book from Jane Davis and I quite enjoyed it. I liked her writing style and the vernacular used by some characters. I was engaged while listening to the audiobook. The story was heartfelt and the three different lives intertwined were touching.

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A Funeral For An Owl is a fascinating story about two teachers connecting with a troubled student at a low income school. While I enjoyed the story and the mystery I just didn’t feel the emotions that should’ve come along with this book. Without an emotional attachment to any of the characters this book fell a little flat for me. I needed more from the heart and less from the fact sheet.

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This was an enjoyable read. The varied POVs made the story interesting and I definitely felt invested in the characters. I recommend!

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I was really excited to receive an advance eAudio arc of this book. The cover alone was enough for me to be keen.

We have two teachers Ayisha and Jim, working at an inner city school where there are some gritty kids, there's a fight one lunchtime and Jim is severely wounded, stabbed. Ayisha's terrible attitude to her first aid training does her no favours, she is pushed aside from her rubbish ministrations by a young student who is very protective of Jim. Shamayal, the student seems to be close to Jim. This doesn't seem right to Ayisha. These 3 are the nucleus around which the story swirls. We weave in and out of their stories.

Jim is a wonderful character, someone who cares deeply for his students because he knows where they come from, he grew up locally in similar circumstances to the young people he teaches. He knows the people in the neighbourhood and he has a heart full of love for these people. We learn his back story, meet his childhood friend Aimee and come to know him very well.

All of this is really not selling this lovely book. It is gentle, it is melancholic and moving. I didn't want it to end, the atmosphere that the author manages to build up had me gripped. So cleverly are the threads pulled together that I had to listen to the end of the book twice to get it. Gah so good!

I shall endeavour to read more books from this author. Thanks so much to NetGalley and the publisher for giving me access to this wonderful treat.

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Thank you to Saga Egmont Audio and NetGalley for an advanced listening copy of this title.

You would think that as a teacher, I would love a book about 2 teachers connecting with a troubled student and even risking their jobs to keep him from a dark future. I just struggled to connect with any of the characters.

This story is told from 3 perspectives - teachers Ayisha and Jim and their 14-year old student Shamayal. I wanted to care about these characters and their individual backstories, but I never clicked with any of them. Most other reviewers disagree with me, so I think it's definitely worth checking out for yourself.

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dnf at 60.1% of the way through the audiobook.

i have seen a lot of high praise for this book and i definitely understand why. it is a heart-warming story of found family and childhood which is sure to charm everyone. i enjoyed the light exploration of class and culture within this setting from all the characters.

since i have already passed the half way point i was going to just push myself to read it however, i have left this for more than a week now and i don't see myself listening the rest of it at this point. also, i feel that if i do force myself to finish it i will just end up not enjoying it and overlooking the strengths of the book.

the reason i lacked the motivation to continue is that the story failed to captivate me. i would say the story is "good" in the most basic sense of the word. it was not bad however, it wasn't outstanding and just fell kind of flat for me. especially since i tend to read a lot of contemporary literary fiction, this failed to do anything new for me.

i will say the audiobook narration was quite fun and definitely appreciated the commitment to varying accents and voices when it came to the range of characters featured in the book

i can see myself recommending this to people who are trying to get into these multiple timeline and point of view, contemporary books. however, for people who read books within the same vein i don't see this as something you should go out of your way to get.

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I really enjoyed this novel a funeral for an Owl, it starts with a stabbing of a teacher, Jim Stevens who is a teacher in a inner city where gangs are rife, and the novel really seemed to show the way young people get into gangs and the false bravado they hide behind. thanks The novel jumps between Jims current life & growing up with his Mum, his druggy brother and absent dad and what molded him to become a teacher, Jim has befriended and wants to protect his 14 year old student Shamayal Thomas a surprisingly sensitive teenager who lives with his alcoholic, violent father & Jim sees himself in Shamayal and wants to stear him in the right direction in life, and then there is fellow teacher Ayisha Emmanuelle who begrudgingly agrees to help Jim protect the secret of his friendship of Shamayal. The story was engaging but I did feel the ending was rushed and felt so abrupt that I had to relisten to it invaded had missed something. The narrator Alex Dunmore did an excellent job with the telling and really helped bring the story to life.

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Format: audiobook
Author: Jane Davis ~ Title: A Funeral for an Owl ~ Narrator: Alix Dunmore
Content: 4.5 stars ~ Narration: 5 stars

A Funeral for an Owl by Jane Davis is a satisfying literary fiction. Although, I should emphasize that it is quite slow-paced and you could like it only if this is not a problem for you.

Three different views from three different worlds. The story is told from three POVs: Ayisha (teacher), Jim (teacher), and Shamayal (14-year-old student). Through their perspective, the author unfolds two major stories: one happening in the present and one in the past when Jim was twelve. Shamayal is from a dysfunctional home, and his two teachers want to help him. But where is the limit of the teacher-student relationship? Can they be friends?

Only one narrator in this audiobook, but Alix Dunmore did an excellent job here. I liked the accents, and that she made all the characters distinguishable. Also, Jane Davis is a very talented writer. I will look for her works in the future. In a book or audiobook form. 4.5 rounded to 5.

Thanks to Saga Egmont Audio the for the ARC and the opportunity to listen to this! All opinions are my own.

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The commute was so enjoyable. I absolutely loved this book, as a teacher and a Londoner.
Apologies for mis-spellings of names as I listened to the audiobook.
Ayisha Emmanuelle, a teacher sticks to the rules and reports anything untoward to her superiors. Friendless and lonely she stumbles across Jim stevens after he is stabbed at school.
14-year-old Shamayal Thomas helps save his teacher’s life.

Jim Stevens teaches history and lives in the past. A passion for birdwatching and a deep secret.

Such a fantastic cast of characters, this book is packed with gritty realism and deep emotion.
Five ⭐️ ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

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Told from the perspectives of three people, A Funeral for an Owl begins with a high school teacher, Jim, being stabbed in the playground when attempting to break up a fight. Fellow teacher, Ayesha and 14 year old student Shemayal together save his life...the story then revolves around these characters, how their lives intertwine and how far these two teachers are willing to go to help the troubled teenager. The story jumps from the past and present from Jim's point of view, but I actually enjoyed this aspect, it really helped me to understand the choices he made growing up and the adult he became. Despite the gritty circumstances of the story, there's a lot of humour and warmth in this book, I laughed out loud a few times and I found myself caring for these characters. It's honestly not an easy book to sum up, but I really enjoyed it, it's the kind of story that stays on your mind after the final chapter. Alix Dunmore narrated this perfectly, she made it very easy to tell the characters and timelines apart.

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I chose this book merely because it had this wonderful cover – I love owls (see our foyer wallpaper in the background) and was fascinated by the purple and green cover!
I did not realize this book had been published years back, November 2013 to be exact, and only the audio was new additionally I was fully unprepared for the marvellous tale that followed. It contains gritty details of urban life in South London, but contains great hopes for those who, by luck, determination or changed circumstance, are able to take control of their own lives. There is much humour in this tale, which lightens many very dark situations. Two of the main characters are teachers and I loved the exploration into what a teacher can and cannot do when helping students in need of support - professional standards on the one hand the simple humanity of giving a student in need shelter in your own home on the other. And what do you do when you realize a colleague is going beyond professional boundaries ?
I found the author’s style engaging, with relatable characters, detailed descriptions of places, emotional scenes and unexpected plot directions. The book had a strong theme of loss  and the influence missing persons have on our lives. I highly recommend 'Funeral for an Owl' to readers who like a well-told story.
The narration by Alix Dunmore was wonderful and fit this story perfectly.
 
Originally published November 2013 - Audio out today, September 30th, 2021


Thank you to @netgalley and @sagaegmont for providing me with this advance audio in exchange for an honest review.

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I thoroughly enjoyed this audiobook. The story was told through multiple points of view over different time lines. Great characters. I really liked Bins. I was gripped from beginning to end. The narrator was very good and made each character sound completely different. I would definitely recommend this author and will be looking to read more by her soon.

Thank you to NetGalley and the publishers for the audioARC of this book.

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OK…… i’m not gonna lie, this sounded intriguing want to read the description on NetGalley. And it was definitely interesting not the way I was expecting.

If you’re not being very clear attention which I wasn’t at once thank you ADHD. You can get confused very quickly because it bounces back-and-forth to the past and the present and it gets confusing


I started out really really being intrigued in like the first few chapters were just brilliant after that I got less intrigued.

I don’t know there’s nothing wrong with it per se it just felt like it was maybe five chapters too long.


If you like a very slow burn very slow to fulfill kind of story you’re gonna love this
If you don’t you’re not going to
Also the audio production is brilliant as always
3.5 stars
And thank you Nageli for sending me this copy for Free for review

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A Funeral for an Owl was like having your friend order a cocktail you know you’re going to hate but then you are completely surprised to find out that it’s quite yummy.
I didn’t know what to expect and went in blind. I felt like it started out slow and I was a little confused at first about the time lines, but after that I caught on quite well and really enjoyed it. It had characters I would love to have friendships with and was won over by their past which made them who they were now. The story revealed how vulnerable and lonely we sometimes are and made me want to do better.
This ended up being a very satisfying read and I recommend it.
I choose to listen to this book on audio and was narrated by Alix Dunmore who was very good. This was 10 hours and 18 mins of enjoyable listening.
Thanks Saga Egmont Audio via Netgalley.

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This was a tough one to review. I’m still at a loss about where to begin. My usual “Nutshell” summation escapes me. So I’ll just start by saying: I LOVED this book, but it is not for everyone. Read on to see if this book will work for you.

Story:
The story comes to us from multiple perspectives and over multiple timelines.
Ayisha, July 2010 onwards – A high school teacher, the story begins with her discovering that one of her colleagues, Jim Steven, has been stabbed in broad daylight in the school grounds. There’s a big group of stunned students surrounding him, but no one wants to confess what happened. Ayisha chooses Shamayal, one of the students, to assist her in proving first aid to Jim until the authorities arrive. But when she later discovers that Shamayal and Jim are friends, she wonders if she should report her colleague to the educational authorities. Why does she hesitate? What makes her, a strict rule-abider, go against her fundamental nature to help Jim and Shamayal?
Shamayal, April 2010 onwards – At fourteen, Shamayal is living his life on his own. His mother has long abandoned him, and his father, with whom he resides, has more interest in alcohol and women than in his son. When his history teacher Jim spots him in the bleak hours of the night wandering the streets, Jim realises that he may have many things in common with this lad who wears a brave mask to cover his struggles. But does Shamayal want his teacher’s support in his life when he wants to be seen as independent?
Jim, 1990 and 2010 – Jim has a difficult childhood, with only his mother as a constant, loving presence. His father and his brother are criminals and walk in and out of his life. When he discovers Aimee, he feels kinship with her as she too seems to have family struggles. While they indulge together in Jim’s favourite hobby of bird-watching, their friendship seems to become stronger. But soon something happens that casts a shadow over their lives. Will their friendship recover? Can a boy and a girl have a perfectly platonic friendship without anyone spoiling it for them? In 2010, Jim is struggling to recover from the stabbing. But he realises that the problem is far from over as the culprit is still out there. How will his life be upturned by this unexpected incident?

The book starts with Jim’s stabbing. But if you think that takes precedence over everything else in the narrative, you have it wrong. The stabbing is incidental to the main plot. This book isn’t a crime investigation; it is to know how the horrifying incident affected the lives of the people mentioned above. This is a book you read not for thrills or action or adventure. This is a book to be read for is characters.

What a well-rounded effort by the author in bringing those characters to life! The individual character voices are written so well that you are left in no doubt of their personality and the reasons behind their actions at any point during the story. Each character is as real as you can get, with imperfections and internal conflicts. Each is trying to figure the others out beyond the outward facade that they put on for the world. All three main characters are survivors in their own way. Their past environment moulded them into who they are in the present, and each of them is a testimony to how nature and nurture work in shaping personalities. I must mention two secondary characters who don’t appear much in the story but who will still make their presence felt: Ayisha’s mother and the vagrant Bins. In fact, Bins will probably enter my list of all-time favourite secondary characters in a book.

If you are the kind of reader who wants action on every page, this book won’t work for you. It is a literary fiction, so it’s obviously not for everyone, and it must be picked up in the right mood. It proceeds at its pace, it focusses more on the people than the plot progression, and yet, the narrative moves forward steadily. I was mesmerised by the story, the writing and most of all, the three main characters. I was initially confused about why Ayisha viewed Jim’s closeness with Shamayal as a problem, but the story suggests that personal connections between teachers and students are strictly barred in the UK. Once you get your head around that, her reactions are justifiable.

The title has a significant role to play in the plot, but I don’t want to reveal the connection here. Just know that it refers to a key turning point in the story.

The sudden and unexpected ending left me feeling deprived, I wanted more, I wanted to know what happened next! It was like being taken to a high point and left there to survive on your own. That’s the reason I didn’t review the book immediately. I wanted to process my feelings for it. Now, almost a day later, I realise that the book ended at just the right point. Events in life don’t always tie themselves in neat, resolved packages; why must books? The characters are still in my mind a day later; isn’t that the mark of a great story?

To sum up, this is not your typical run-of-the-mill novel, it's a well-written character study that includes a commentary on society and its prejudices. If you ever want to read a book to know how characters ought to be sketched, please give this a try. Much recommended for literary fiction readers.

4.5 stars from me.

I heard the audiobook with the three main characters narrated by Alix Dunmore, Alix Dunmore and Alix Dunmore and the secondary characters voiced by Alix Dunmore. Does that give you a clue of how impressed I was with her performance? What a performance! Every accent, spot on. Every individual character, distinct. Every dialogue delivery, perfect. I would have loved the book even if I were reading it. (I’m absolutely sure of this; I love well-written and realistic characters.) But she took the book even further with her narration. Not once did I have to rewind in the 10 hrs 18 min long audiobook. (And this hardly ever happens! The “loop back 30 seconds” is the second most used button on my app, after the Play/Pause button.) Of course, if you get confused with multiple timelines and multiple character perspectives, it might make more sense to read the book than to hear it. As far as I’m concerned, either method would work just fine for this story.

Thank you, Saga Egmont Audio and NetGalley, for the audio ARC of the book in exchange for an honest review.

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Funeral for an Owl begins with a fight in a school playground on the last day of term – teacher Jim Stevens attempts to break it up & gets stabbed in the process. His colleague Ayisha is first on the scene and she arrives to see Jim bleeding profusely from a chest wound, his head being held by a pupil, Shamayal.
The story unfolds through these three very different perspectives:
* Jim is a history teacher with a troubled background. He came from “the wrong side of the tracks” but eventually was able to move on to become a teacher. We discover a lot more about Jim & his character through flashbacks to the summer of 1992 when Jim was 11 years old and trying to fill his summer holidays with something other than hanging around with the local gangs that his brother was involved with.
* Shamayal is a student at the school where Jim & Ayisha teach. He has a drunken father, a mother who left and as a young black kid from an estate he’s learned to trust nobody. Shamayal’s language, thoughts and behaviours are exceptionally well developed – as we find out more about him, he becomes more & more believable and his story starts to resonate.
* Ayisha is a young Asian teacher who is struggling to find her place in the world – living away from her traditional family for the first time we see her struggling with the concept of right & wrong, when is it ok the break the rules? Whilst I can totally understand the character of Ayisha & her approach to things, her lack of confidence and dithering did not endear her to me – I found her to be shallow, cold and quite aimless which was quite a contrast to the strong portrayals of Jim (both now and as an 11 yr old), Shamayal and many of the other peripheral characters such as Jim’s mother, and “Bins” a local character who knows everyone on the estate by the nick-names he gives them but is unable to recognise faces.
* Aimee is the fourth key character in the book and was a 13 yr old girl that Jim befriended in the summer of 1992. They spent much of the time together, but what happened to leave such an impact on Jim’s life 20 years later?

I liked the time jumps which worked very well in this book. As Jim recovers in hospital, he remembers his childhood, the positives but also the hurts, the betrayals of those closest to him. We meet Aimee, a privileged 13 yr old that Jim had a brief friendship with back in 1992 and also start to understand Jim’s connection to Shamayal and his desire to help the teen stay out of trouble. Ayisha visits Jim in hospital because he doesn’t really have anyone else, yet it is only through the flashbacks into Jim’s past that we start to understand why he is reluctant to become close to Ayisha despite their mutual attraction.

Overall this is a well-written multi-layered story that you will not want to put down – it plays with your emotions & sense of right and wrong, and weaves together people who would not ordinarily have become friends (male & female, teen & adult, teacher & student, White/Asian/Black, from “the wrong side of the tracks” and the more privileged areas). I listened to the audiobook and the narrator differentiated between the characters really well and the voice/patois of Shamayal was perfect!

In many ways this is a 5* book, however one of the challenges for me, as somebody who works in a school, is the way that the “rules” around safeguarding are handled. Whilst it adds to the story in many ways, it feels as though the author has not got up to date knowledge of this and it does somewhat ruin the credibility for me. I sympathized with the characters and had the whole story run over a few days I could have accepted it but it could never have continued for this length of time. The ending wasn’t what I expected. I was pleased that it didn’t finish weakly with an “everyone lived happily ever after”, but at the same time the ending left me wanting more … it just seemed to stop suddenly & whilst I appreciate that the author wanted to leave the reader with more questions, it would have worked better for me if it had just been Jim & Ayisha present, not on a school trip.

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I am grateful to #NetGalley and the publisher for introducing me to the work of Jane Davis, the author of A Funeral for an Owl. A Funeral for an Owl is a layered literary novel with charm and humor as well as harsh realism. The mixture of uplift and grit is something only an accomplished author could pull off; and I will certainly read more of Davis’s work.

Funeral for an Owl begins with a schoolyard fight, in which teacher Jim Stevens is stabbed while trying to intervene. His life is saved by prompt aid from fellow teacher Ayisha Emmanuelle and student Shamayal Thomas. Ayisha and Shamayal visit Jim regularly during his 6 week hospital stay, despite Ayisha’s dismay at the revelation of the existing friendship between Jim and Shamayal. Middle-class emigre Ayisha is a rule-follower, and there is a strict rule (surprising to an American) against any fraternization at all between teachers and students. But, starting with an offered ride on a rainy day, Jim has befriended Shamayal in part because Shamayal’s haphazard parenting and violent surroundings mirror Jim’s own inner-city childhood, which was made bearable by his love of bird-watching and his brief friendship with a privileged girl called Aimee.

Shamayal’s intelligence and cheeky wit enliven the book and captivate Ayisha against her will, linking Jim and Ayisha in their attempt to save Shamayal. But the real movement of the book comes from the gradual unfolding of Jim’s past, and the book alternates between Jim’s twelfth summer in 1992 and Shamayal’s peril in 2010. All of the characters are well-drawn, and the reader has no trouble empathizing with them and rooting for positive outcomes. Davis is too skilled to provide a cliché’d happy ending, but through the intervention of several surprising helpers, the book leaves the reader with a bittersweet appreciation of human goodwill in the midst of human struggle.

I can heartily recommend this book. Nevertheless, there were certain jarring aspects, more likely the fault of the publisher than the author. For one thing, this book was billed as a mystery/thriller—and it is neither. Also, though the narrator of this audiobook was excellent, particularly with dialect, the frequent point of view switches were sometimes confusing. Additionally my copy stuttered occasionally, and it repeated Chapter One as Chapter Fifty. If this is to be newly released as an audiobook, I would suggest careful audio editing and the inclusion of more clues as to point of view. It would be a shame if poor audio prevented listeners from enjoying this excellent book.

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