A Cage of Butterflies explained

A Cage of Butterflies
Author:Brian Caswell
Cover Artist:Gregory Rogers
Country:Australia
Language:English
Publisher:University of Queensland Press
Release Date:1992
Media Type:Print (Paperback & Audio)
Pages:164 pp
Isbn:0-7022-2416-2
Congress:PZ7.C26876 Cag 1992
Oclc:27531260

A Cage of Butterflies is a 1992 young adult novel by Australian author Brian Caswell.[1]

Plot summary

The story is set in a research facility (known as the "farm") involving two groups of people. The first group contains several teenagers with IQs above 150. These teenagers (Greg, Mikki, Lesley, Gordon, Gretel, Katie and Chris) call themselves the "Think Tank". However, this group is merely a smokescreen for the real subjects of the research - five seven-year-olds who are able to communicate telepathically, known as the "Babies". The Babies are called Pep, Ricardo, Ian, Rachael and Myriam. The Babies were all born around the same time in the same hospital.

When the members of the first group are "contacted" by the Babies, they learn of the researchers' exploitation, and, with the help of compassionate workers at the facility (Susan and Erik), investigate the reason for the Babies' condition. The Babies need help as the head researcher, Larsen, will stop at nothing to solve the mystery. The Think Tank, as well as researcher Susan and young orderly Erik, provide this help.

They trick the head researcher, John Larsen, so they can escape. The story ends with the Think Tank six years into the future. They turned the think tank into 'Think Tank Inc.', a company worth three million dollars. The Babies, Think Tank and newlyweds Erik and Susan all live together. Greg and Mikki are also married.

The title, "A Cage of Butterflies" refers to the fact that Larsen and the research staff keep both the Babies and the think tank under constant supervision and keep them "caged" or "prisoners" since they do not allow them to move around freely.

Characters

Think Tank

Researchers/scientists

The Babies

Awards

Notes and References

  1. Kimberley. Maree. 2011-06-25. Neuroscience and Young Adult Fiction: A Recipe for Trouble?. M/C Journal. 14. 3. 10.5204/mcj.371. 1441-2616. free.
  2. Web site: CBCA Notable Books - Older Readers Book awards . 2020-11-15. LibraryThing.
  3. Web site: The Children’s Book Council of Australia Book of the Year Awards 1946 — . live. November 15, 2020. The Children's Book Council of Australia. https://web.archive.org/web/20200712144551/https://cbcacloud.blob.core.windows.net/documents/National/CBCA%20Awards%201946%20on.pdf . 12 July 2020 .