TOUR SCHEDULE: The Songbird and the Rambutan Tree by Lucille Abendanon

Hello everyone! We are so excited to announce the tour schedule for The Songbird and the Rambutan Tree by Lucille Abendanon.

January 24th
Stuck in FictionPromotional Post

January 25th
One More ExclamationReview

January 26th
Lia AnsharReview

January 27th
Boys’ Mom Reads!Review

January 28th
the nutty bookworm reads alotReview

January 22nd
nissa_the.bookwormReview
acourtofspinesnpagesReview

January 23rd
bookdemonioPromotional Post
mythicmelancholyReview, Favorite Quotes
froggyreadteachTop 5 Reasons to Read The Songbird and the Rambutan Tree, Creative Post: Little Free Library Drop

January 24th
artxsoulsReview, Mood Board
avainbooklandReview, Favorite Quotes

January 25th
ablueboxfullofbooksCreative Post: Little Free Library Drop, TikTok
pagesforpaigeReview
onemoreexclamationContent Creator’s Choice

January 26th
tbrandbeyondPromotional Post
lfl_onhstReview

January 27th
ninebookishlivesPromotional Post
hooked.on.books.and.cookiesReview, Creative Post: Little Free Library Drop
stitchsaddictionReview, TikTok

January 28th
enthuse_readerReview, TikTok
callistoscallingTop 5 Reasons to Read The Songbird and the Rambutan Tree

Genre: Middle Grade Historical Fiction
Publishing date: January 21st, 2024

Goodreads | Amazon | Barnes & Noble | IndieBound

Synopsis:

Batavia, Dutch East Indies, 1942.

Emmy has the voice of an angel but hasn’t sung a note since a family tragedy. With war looming, her father plans to ship her off to a singing school in England for safety. But all Emmy wants to do is stay in Batavia with her best friend, Bakti, even if it means putting up with her snooty classmate, Violet. Then the Japanese army invades—and as war erupts in the Dutch East Indies, Emmy’s world falls apart.

When her own actions sabotage her chance to evacuate the island, Emmy is captured and confined in the Tjideng prisoner-of-war camp with other women and children. Separated from her family and friends, and silenced by her grief, Emmy will need all her strength to survive the war, find her voice, and reclaim her freedom.

Content Warning: War, invasion, prisoners of war, grief, violence

Lucille Abendanon has always lived a life on the move. She grew up in Norfolk before emigrating to South Africa when she was twelve. She has three nationalities and over the past twenty years has called Vietnam, Thailand, Turkey and The Netherlands home. She holds an MA in International Studies, and recently returned to the UK to give her three boys a slice of the rural childhood she enjoyed. She is an alumnus of the Curtis Brown Creative Writing YA and Children’s Fiction course, and has contributed to numerous anthologies about living abroad and raising multicultural kids on the move.

Twitter | Instagram

Leave a comment