A fable in every chapter
Each chapter is anchored to a public-domain fable, retold through Zoe and her farm. Forty-eight unique fables across the four books. The lesson is shown, never lectured.
A four-book seasonal series for newly-confident readers (ages 6–9), set on a small British farm where prejudice is gently undone, kindness travels further than force, and a blue butterfly is always somewhere in the picture.
Each chapter is anchored to a public-domain fable, retold through Zoe and her farm. Forty-eight unique fables across the four books. The lesson is shown, never lectured.
One ladybird in Chapter 1, two in Chapter 2, building to twelve in Chapter 12. Seventy-eight in total, a triangular number. Sharp readers do the maths and feel clever for the right reasons.
A small Common Blue (Polyommatus-icarus) appears in every full-page and half-page illustration. It is never explained. The meaning is the reader's to keep.
Rottweilers are one of the most stereotyped dog breeds in Britain. Casting one as the gentle, brave, deeply observant lead lets children meet prejudice, and watch it being undone, without ever being told what to think.
From the Brand Bible
Zoe never uses her strength unless it protects someone else. She listens more than she speaks. She helps without expecting thanks. She is, in a word, calm.
From Zoe's Behavioural Rules
The series promises something rare in modern children's publishing: warmth without sentimentality, and lessons without lectures. Bedtime-safe. Heart-rate steady.
From the Tone Check
Four books, four seasons, four protagonists: each book introduces the next book's lead in a quiet background role. Read them in any order; read them in season for the full effect.
↑ Hover the spines ↑
A young Rottweiler arrives at Merevale Creek Farm. Every animal sees a big, scary dog. Across twelve chapters and one storm-struck Jubilee, her actions, never her words, change every single one of them.
The creek is changing, and only Mable has noticed. Patient, unhurried, and braver than anyone knew, the farm's quietest cow leads everyone to the answer while Zoe, for once, steps back.
A small hedgehog who has always been on the outside finds her way in, not by becoming someone else, but by finding the place where she already belongs. The Winter Gathering, and the warmth of being known.
An owl who has only ever watched from the highest branch comes down to the ground. The Spring Fair, the swelling creek, and the difficult, necessary skill of landing.
One ladybird in Chapter 1. Two in Chapter 2. Three in Chapter 3. All the way to twelve in Chapter 12.
Total per book: 78. Total across the four books: 312. The early chapters are easy; the later ones are properly challenging; some are hidden in shadow, under hooves, or right by the spine.
Add up the numbers 1 through 12 and you always get 78:
This is called a triangular number, because if you arrange 78 dots into rows of 1, 2, 3... up to 12, they form a perfect triangle. Mathematicians have known about triangular numbers since ancient Greece.
There is also a shortcut. To find any triangular number, multiply the last number by the next one up, then halve it:
Sharp readers who spot the pattern, and work out the total before finishing the book, feel clever for exactly the right reasons. That is entirely intentional.
Fifteen named characters, the Blue Butterfly, and The Ladybird mechanic.
Seven female, eight male. Two protagonists are female and two male.
Common Blue (Polyommatus icarus), a real British species, native to farmland meadows. Always vivid #4A90D9. Always wings open. Present in every full-page and half-page illustration of every chapter, of every book. Never speaks. Never explained. The meaning is the reader's to keep.
Common 7-spot Ladybird (Coccinella septempunctata). Hidden only in the illustrations: 1 in Chapter 1, 2 in Chapter 2, all the way to 12 in Chapter 12. 78 per book. 312 across the four-book series. The challenge page at the back of every book lets readers tick them off.
78 = 1+2+3+4+5+6+7+8+9+10+11+12. A triangular number. Some of the later ones really are tucked away.
Each location has a distinct character that recurs consistently across all four books.
Sun-warmed in summer, copper in autumn, cold-blue in winter, fresh and rain-fed in spring.
The gate creak sounds in every chapter. The lantern at the gate ends every book.
Become a ladybird detective. Click each chapter to tick it off as you find them all. Your progress is kept on this device only.
78 = 1+2+3+4+5+6+7+8+9+10+11+12. A triangular number. Some of the later ones really are tucked away; you may need to look in shadows, under hooves, or right by the spine.
One ladybird in Chapter 1. Two in Chapter 2. Three in Chapter 3. All the way to twelve in Chapter 12. Add them up and you always get 78:
This is called a triangular number, because if you arrange 78 dots into rows of 1, 2, 3... up to 12, they form a perfect triangle. Mathematicians have known about triangular numbers since ancient Greece.
There is also a shortcut. To find any triangular number, multiply the last number by the next one up, then halve it:
Sharp readers who spot the pattern, and work out the total before finishing the book, feel clever for exactly the right reasons. That is entirely intentional.
Zoe at the gate, Mable at her fence, the Old Barn at feast-time. Crayons or felt-tips both fine.
The official 78-ladybird tracker. Tick them off as you find them. Don't peek at the answers!
Six quick questions. Are you more like calm Zoe, anxious Pip, organised Margot, or stubborn Otis?
What does the blue butterfly mean? Nobody will tell you. Send us your idea and the best ideas will be featured on the site.
Explore all eight farm locations and see what happens at each one.
Three games set on Merevale Creek Farm: match the characters, catch the butterflies, or guess Who Am I?
A 16-page printable journal: tick the books, find the ladybirds, draw your favourite scene from each season.
How does Old Barley sound? What does Mr Otis grumble like? A printable card per character to act out the chapters.
Every great children's book has a visible ticking problem: a central tension the reader can feel counting down. Zoe and the Great Summer Jubilee runs three at once, in parallel.
The Great Summer Jubilee is coming. Every chapter counts down. At every turn, something threatens the celebration. The reader is always aware it could be lost, and that Zoe is at the centre of whether it happens or not.
Will the farm ever truly accept Zoe? Each chapter earns her one more ally: the slow accumulation mirrors social dynamics children recognise immediately. When Zoe leads the parade in Chapter 12, both external and internal clocks stop together: a double payoff.
From the moment readers learn the ladybird challenge, a third race begins: can they find all 78 before the book ends? As chapter numbers rise, so does the count and the difficulty. Chapter 12's twelve are the hardest of all. The hunt clock runs in parallel with Zoe's own journey.
Story + Visual Hunt + Emotional Payoff = books children return to, talk about, share, and grow up with. The re-readability built into the ladybird and butterfly mechanics is not an add-on; it is structural.
Each Merevale Creek Farm book introduces one new character in a background role: present, meaningful, but unexplained. That character then leads the next book. This creates a chain of discovery that rewards returning readers and continuously expands the world.
Mable is seeded as a quiet presence at her fence post across the creek, barely explained, watching everything.
Squashy is seeded as a small hedgehog on the farm's edge, whose outside knowledge will matter more than anyone realises.
Olive is seeded as an owl in the high branches, watching the farm for years from above, not yet ready to come down.
Zoe is present in every book; in Books 2–4 she steps back, enabling rather than leading. Her arc is always there; it simply shares the stage.
Each book is fully standalone: characters and setting are reintroduced in every volume. But readers who follow the series will know Mable, Squashy and Olive long before they lead, which transforms the moment each one steps forward into something children feel they have been part of from the beginning.
The series is built from the ground up as an SEL-rich text. Every chapter addresses one or more competencies from the CASEL framework, mapped to the UK PSHE curriculum for KS1 and KS2. The Learning Ladder mirrors Bloom's Taxonomy, escalating from recall (Chapters 1–4) through application (5–8) to analysis and evaluation (9–12).
| Skill / Theme | UK National Curriculum | CASEL competency | Strongest in |
|---|---|---|---|
| Prediction & inference | KS1 reading comprehension | Self-awareness | Books 1, 2 |
| Sequencing & narrative structure | KS1 narrative form | Responsible decision-making | All books |
| Character traits & perspective-taking | KS1 / KS2 character study | Social awareness | All books |
| Setting, atmosphere, sensory writing | KS2 description & description | Self-management | Books 1, 3 |
| Cause & effect, problem-solving | KS2 plot analysis | Responsible decision-making | Books 2, 4 |
| Prejudice, fairness, belonging | KS1 / KS2 PSHE | Relationship skills | Book 1, Book 3 |
| Patience, observation, listening | KS2 PSHE | Self-awareness | Book 2, Book 4 |
Every chapter is anchored to a single, named public-domain fable. Forty-eight unique fables across the four books, forming a complete classical-literacy primer, embedded invisibly.
Merevale Creek Farm: a four-book seasonal series
Everything you need to assess, acquire, shelve and promote the series: reading-level data, comparable titles, series order, format details, and a printable one-page collection development sheet.
A four-book seasonal chapter-book series set on Merevale Creek Farm. Each book follows Zoe, a Rottweiler, as she earns the trust of the farm animals through patient, consistent kindness. Every chapter retells a named public-domain fable (Aesop, La Fontaine and equivalents); 48 unique fables across the series. The central theme of prejudice overcome by behaviour rather than argument is never stated directly; it is shown. This makes the series unusually strong for inference and discussion work.
6–9 years. Works as a read-aloud for ages 5+ and as independent reading from around age 8.
Approximately 7–8 years for independent reading. Vocabulary is deliberately stretching in places; context usually clarifies meaning, making it a strong inference text.
Fiction · Junior chapter books · Animals & farm life · Fable retellings · SEL / character education
Prejudice · Belonging · Trust · Patience · Fables · Farm animals · Dogs · Seasonal stories · Social-emotional learning
Each book is fully standalone: characters and setting are reintroduced in every volume. Sequential reading rewards returning readers with deepening character knowledge, but no book requires a previous one.
For readers who enjoyed Merevale Creek Farm, or to assess where the series fits in your collection.
Farm animals, quiet wisdom, friendship earned over time. The tonal and thematic ancestor of the series.
An outsider animal earns a place on the farm through unusual behaviour. Similar age range and British countryside setting.
Dog protagonist, UK setting, same age range. Readers wanting more dog-centred chapter books.
For readers who want to explore the source material. Each Merevale chapter names its fable, ideal for paired reading.
Animal narrator, empathy and belonging themes, quiet moral depth. Slightly older readership (8–10) but strong thematic overlap.
Animal protagonist overcoming prejudice and fear through earned respect. Strong cross-cultural themes, similar chapter-book format.
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Title | Zoe and the Great Summer Jubilee |
| Series | Merevale Creek Farm, Book 1 |
| Publisher | Merevale Publishing |
| Publication date | 2026 (exact date TBC) |
| Format: hardback | ISBN TBC · [size] · [page count] |
| Format: paperback | ISBN TBC · [size] · [page count] |
| Format: ebook | ISBN TBC |
| Illustrations | Full-colour chapter openers + spot art throughout |
| Word count | ~16,000 words · 12 chapters |
| Distribution (UK) | TBC; Peters / Gardners status to follow |
| Distribution (US / worldwide) | TBC |
ISBN and full bibliographic data will be confirmed ahead of publication. If you wish to be notified, please use the contact form below.
A single printable page summarising the series for acquisition committees, shelf labels and internal cataloguing notes. Includes: series overview, reading levels, comparable titles, thematic headings, and a shelf-talker panel.
Free to reproduce for internal library use. Please do not redistribute commercially.
A four-book series, one farm, and a quiet idea: that the gentlest character on the page is often the one with the most to teach.
Merevale Creek Farm is a small British farm where, across four seasons, four protagonists learn the difference between being known and being seen. Zoe, the misunderstood Rottweiler, is the emotional anchor of the whole series. Mable, the cow who watches the creek. Squashy, the hedgehog who doesn't fit. Olive, the owl who has only ever looked down.
Every chapter of every book is anchored to a public-domain fable (Aesop, La Fontaine, and equivalents) retold with care for the way modern children read. Forty-eight unique fables across the series. The lesson is shown, never delivered.
The series is built for newly-confident readers (UK Years 2–4 / US Grades 1–3) and is designed to read as easily aloud at bedtime as it does in a Year 3 classroom. Large print. Soft edges. No frenetic pacing, no humiliation comedy, no cynicism, no true villains.
"If a scene feels loud, busy, or clever-at-someone's-expense, it is off-brand. Could this scene be read aloud at bedtime without raising a child's heart rate?"
Zoe at the gate, Mable at her fence, the Old Barn at feast-time. Crayons or felt-tips both fine.
The official 78-ladybird tracker. Tick them off as you find them. Don't peek at the answers!
Six quick questions. Are you more like calm Zoe, anxious Pip, organised Margot, or stubborn Otis?
What does the blue butterfly mean? Nobody will tell you. Send us your idea and the best ideas will be featured on the site.
Explore all eight farm locations and see what happens at each one.
Three games set on Merevale Creek Farm: match the characters, catch the butterflies, or guess Who Am I?
A 16-page printable journal: tick the books, find the ladybirds, draw your favourite scene from each season.
How does Old Barley sound? What does Mr Otis grumble like? A printable card per character to act out the chapters.
Print them out, grab your crayons or felt-tips, and colour in the world of Merevale Creek Farm. New pages added regularly.
Zoe standing by the old farm gate on a summer morning.
Open to Print / SaveThe Merevale Creek Farm character collection.
Open to Print / SaveThe farm animals sharing honey together.
Open to Print / SaveMable in her pasture, watching across the creek.
Open to Print / SaveMable at the farm gate, full scene with background.
Open to Print / SaveMable at the farm gate, clean outline only.
Open to Print / Save
A small blue butterfly appears in every illustration in every book. It never speaks. It is never explained. What do you think it means? Send us your idea; the best ones will be shared on our website.
Your email is only used to let you know if your idea is featured. It will never be shared.
Wherever she goes, the butterfly follows. It's like a quiet friend that only she can see.
Ellie, age 7, Manchester
Every time something kind happens in the story the butterfly appears. I checked.
Noah, age 9, Bristol
Butterflies only live for a little while. I think it means the story is happening right now and you have to pay attention.
Priya, age 8, Leicester
My mum said butterflies mean change is coming. In the book, things always get better after you see it.
Finn, age 7, Edinburgh
It's always there before something important. I think it's the most important character and nobody notices.
Amara, age 9, Birmingham
My teacher says some things in books are for the reader to decide. I think the butterfly is Zoe's secret and the reader's secret at the same time.
Isla, age 8, York
Even in the hard chapters it's still there. It doesn't fix anything but it stays. That's what it means.
Sam, age 6, Cardiff
Are you calm like Zoe, organised like Margot, enthusiastic like Max, or loyal like Otis? Answer honestly. There are no wrong results.
One card per character. Use them to give every animal their own voice when reading aloud. Print the page and cut them out, or read from the screen.
Speak quietly and steadily, never rushed and never loud. Short sentences with a pause before each one. Zoe means every word. The less she says, the more it counts.
Take your time. Mable is never in a hurry. Long pauses between words. A low, warm rumble. She's been thinking about this for a while and she's not going to rush now.
Fast and slightly squeaky with sentences that run into each other. Voice goes up at the end of questions. Add a tiny wobble when Pip is scared, but let bravery come through when it matters.
Clipped and no-nonsense. Every word has a job. Slightly nasal. Tap a rhythm as you speak; Margot moves at pace. Soften just slightly when she's quietly pleased with someone.
Warm and a little too confident. Slight upward tilt at the end of sentences, like everything is slightly amusing. Rufus knows how good he sounds, and knows that you know it too.
Deep rumble with a permanent sigh underneath. Drag the vowels slightly. Otis sounds like someone who has been mildly inconvenienced by everything, forever, but will always show up anyway.
Everything is the best thing that has ever happened. Top of the voice, lots of energy. Max has two speeds: bounding and asleep. When reading Max, you are bounding.
Tall voice: chin slightly up, back straight. Every sentence sounds like a pronouncement. Hector does not mumble. In later chapters, let the formality crack just slightly when he's moved by something.
Weathered and slow, like wood that has been rained on for decades. Old Barley never wastes a word. Long pauses. A slight rasp. When he says something, everyone should feel the weight of it.
June is the quietest loud voice in the room. Perfectly enunciated. No warmth wasted. "Well." is a complete sentence and should be delivered as one; pause after it and let it land.
Quick and sharp but controlled; Oscar is clever and knows it, but not in a showy way. Ideas come fast. A beat of silence before he speaks, then it comes out clearly and confidently.
Light and fast with zero hesitation. Calypso says exactly what she sees, immediately. No awkwardness, just pure honest observation. She doesn't know she's being blunt, which is what makes it funny.
Very quiet, almost a whisper. Long silences before Squashy speaks. When the words come, they are precise and worth listening to. Never raise the voice. The quietness is the point.
Each word chosen carefully, as if from a very small supply. Steady pace, not slow but considered. Olive has seen things from a height that others haven't. That should feel present in every line.
Fill in your notes for each book as you read it. Tick off your ladybirds, rate the chapters, and leave your mark on the story.
Flip the cards and find the matching pairs. Can you clear the board in under 12 moves?
Blue butterflies are fluttering across the farm. Click them before they fly away. You have 30 seconds!
Read the clues and guess the character. Fewer clues used means more points, but be careful!
Completed in moves.
You caught butterflies!
Best score:
You scored out of 40.
Best score:
The gate at Merevale Creek Farm had stood for a very long time. It was old and crooked, patched with new wood where the old had rotted, and it creaked when the wind blew from the east. Every animal on the farm knew its voice. The long, low groan that meant someone was arriving. That morning, the gate groaned loudest of all, the animals stopped what they were doing and looked.
Zoe was large. That was the first thing anyone noticed. For most of the animals of Merevale Creek Farm, it was also the last thing they needed to know. She was a Rottweiler, black as a rain cloud, with patches of warm tan above her eyes and along her broad chest. Her paws were the size of Margot the Hen's best serving plates. Her tail was long and natural. When she walked through the gate that morning, the gravel crunched beneath her as if the lane itself was paying attention. She carried nothing with her except a quiet expression that gave nothing away.
The farmyard was not exactly welcoming. Hector the Horse stood at the front of the assembled animals with the expression of someone who had been elected spokesman without being asked. He was tall and chestnut-brown, with a mane that he kept very neat, and he had opinions about most things. "We weren't told to expect a dog," he said, to no one in particular and to everyone at once. Margot the Hen clutched her clipboard — the one she kept for Jubilee preparations — then peered at Zoe over the top of it. "A large dog," she added, as if this were relevant information Hector had carelessly omitted.
Pip the Rabbit, who was small and prone to worry, had retreated behind the water trough. Only his ears were visible, twitching like two nervous question marks above the rim. Old Barley the Goat said nothing at all. He was leaning against the fence post at the edge of the yard, chewing slowly, watching Zoe with the patient eyes of an animal who had seen many things come and go and had learned not to make up his mind in the first five minutes.
Zoe stood in the middle of it all and let them look. It was not the first time she had been looked at this way. It did not mean the conversation was over. It meant the conversation had not yet begun. That was different. That was something she could work with.
"Good morning," she said. Her voice was calm and unhurried, like the creek on a still day. "My name is Zoe. I've come to help with the Jubilee."
A silence settled over the farmyard — the particular kind of silence that is not peaceful at all, but full of unspoken things. "The Jubilee," said Hector slowly, "requires a great many helpers." He paused. "It does not, as a rule, require dogs."
"Hector," said Old Barley, from his fence post, "the Jubilee requires whatever it requires. Let the animal speak."
It was Pip who caused the trouble, though he hadn't meant to. An hour after Zoe's arrival, he had been fetching water from the creek. The bucket was large — far too large for a rabbit — and the path back up the bank was steep and slick with summer mud. Halfway up, his back foot went, the bucket lurched, and Pip went tumbling sideways into the reeds with a small, alarmed squeak.
Zoe arrived at the top of the bank to find Pip sitting in the mud, staring at his bucket with an expression of complete despair. "Are you hurt?" Zoe asked. "Only my dignity," said Pip, which was a very brave thing to say for an animal sitting in a muddy reed bed.
Zoe looked at the bucket, which had caught on a branch a little way downstream. She waded in, collected it, filled it at the clearest part of the water, and carried it back up the bank. She set it down beside Pip without a word about how easy it had been, or how small he was, or how he really ought to use a smaller bucket. She simply said: "Where does this need to go?"
Pip glanced at Zoe briefly, then bravely looked at her for the first time — not from behind a trough or through a curtain of reeds. He had expected teeth. He had expected something to be afraid of. Instead, he found a pair of calm brown eyes waiting patiently for directions.
"The barn," he said at last. "For Margot's flowers. She's doing the Jubilee garlands." "I'll carry it," said Zoe. "You've had a difficult morning."
That was the thing about Zoe's help. It did not make you feel smaller for needing it. It made you feel as though needing it had been a perfectly sensible thing to do.
Autumn came to Merevale Creek Farm the way it always did — quietly, then completely. There was a morning in early October when the light shifted without announcement, the air took on a different weight, and the orchard trees went copper at the tips between one dawn and the next. The creek, which had run all summer with a sound like a long, contented exhale, picked up something in its voice — a slight urgency, a quickening — that meant the autumn rains were not far behind.
Margot's clipboard appeared before anyone had finished their breakfast. This was how the farm knew, officially, that autumn had arrived: not by the turning of the leaves or the sharpening of the air, but by the presence of Margot's clipboard and the expression on Margot's face that said the Harvest Supper was twelve days away and there were one hundred and forty-seven things to be done and she had started on forty-three of them already and everyone else needed to catch up immediately.
The farm dispersed into activity with the particular energy of a community that knows exactly what it's doing and enjoys the knowing of it. Max bounded toward the orchard before anyone had asked him to. Hector took up a position of authority near the barn door from which he could direct the barn clearance while technically not helping with it. Pip fetched the first water of the morning from the creek, which was his job and had been his job since before Zoe arrived, and he was very good at it and slightly proud of the fact.
At her pasture fence, Mable the Cow watched. She watched in the way she watched everything — without hurry, without announcement, with the kind of complete attention that most animals never quite managed because they were always moving toward the next thing. She watched the farm prepare for autumn, and the farm preparing for autumn was, she acknowledged, very fine. Then she turned and watched the creek.
She had been watching the creek for six autumns. She knew what it looked like at this time of day, in this quality of light. She knew where the water reached on the stepping stones in October. She knew the level that the water held against the third and fourth stones from the left bank. This morning it fell short. Not dramatically. Not enough that anyone rushing past with a bucket would think twice. But Mable had stood at this bank in six autumns, and the water this morning was lower than it should be — by a measurable and specific amount that she could feel in the difference between what she was seeing and what she knew.
She said nothing. She was not certain enough yet to say something, and Mable did not believe in speaking before she was certain. She would watch for another day, and then another. She would walk the bank further upstream and look at it from different angles. She would listen to the sound of it, which was also different — thinner, quieter, not quite right.
The gate at the end of the lane creaked once as Pip came through it with his water bucket. The autumn sound of it: sharper than summer, the iron cold in the cool air.
Nobody had asked Squashy to be there. That was the usual arrangement.
She was small enough that the farm's larger animals often forgot she existed between sightings, and she had never done anything to remedy this. She appeared when she appeared, from the hedgerow gap behind the water trough, from the narrow space between the barn wall and the cold frame, from the gap under the gate where the wood had lifted, and then she disappeared again, leaving no particular impression except the faint sense, in the animal who had seen her, that something small and useful had just happened.
This morning she was at Badger Bridge.
The old stone crossing sat lower than usual; the water had risen overnight, and the skim of ice that had formed across the upstream side had not yet broken. Squashy stood at the near edge for a long time, looking at the stones beneath the surface. She knew every one. She knew which ones were flat and which ones tilted; she knew where the current pulled harder than it looked, and where the stone nearest the far bank had a crack along the lower edge that made it uncertain in frost.
She crossed carefully. She always crossed carefully. Then she went to find the farm's first lantern before anyone else had thought to look.
The Winter Gathering was six weeks away. There was a great deal to be done. And nobody had asked her to help with any of it, which was, as she had decided long ago, no reason not to.
Olive had been watching Merevale Creek Farm for three years from the rafter of the old elm at the top of the slope, and she knew it better than any animal who lived there.
She knew the exact time the barn door opened in the morning. She knew the path Margot took between the farmyard and the Jubilee meadow, and the three small detours Margot made that she probably did not know she made. She knew where the creek ran faster than it looked in spring, and where the bridge hummed at a certain wind angle, and which corner of the upper field stayed driest when the rains came. She had watched Zoe arrive, three summers ago, and had seen everything that happened next.
She had never once landed in the farmyard.
It had not seemed necessary. She had her perch. She had the whole farm spread below her in perfect silence. She could see farther than any of them, and she had decided, some time ago, that this was the better arrangement.
On the first morning of spring, a jackdaw landed on the rafter beside her and asked what she was looking at.
"Everything," said Olive.
The jackdaw considered this. "What are you doing about it?"
Olive did not have an answer. She had never needed one before.
Book 1 · Zoe and the Great Summer Jubilee
Discussion prompts, Bloom's-tagged comprehension questions, HOTS Question Cubes, vocabulary, three worksheets, and the full KS1/KS2 & CASEL alignment grid, all for Book 1.
Each of the twelve chapters is anchored to a named public-domain fable (Aesop and equivalents) retold through Zoe and the animals of Merevale Creek Farm. The fable underpinning each chapter is listed in the discussion prompts below. Forty-eight unique fables appear across the four-book series.
The book's primary curriculum target is Lower KS2 (Years 3–4), with strong read-aloud value at KS1. The vocabulary is deliberately stretching, with words such as precautionary, indignation and constitutionally appear in early chapters. Context usually clarifies meaning, making this an unusually strong inference-building text. Pre-teaching five Tier 2 words per chapter is recommended (see Field Notes).
The central theme of prejudice undone by patient behaviour is never stated directly. It is shown. This makes it an unusually rich text for perspective-taking, inference and P4C work. No character announces the moral; the reader feels it through consequence.
The twelve chapters are structured in three tiers of escalating comprehension demand. Earlier chapters ask children to observe and describe; middle chapters ask them to negotiate competing perspectives; later chapters ask them to sit with questions that have no clean answer.
Concrete lessons. One problem, one solution. Visible cause and effect. Ladybirds 1–4: easy to find.
Social dynamics. Competing claims. Multiple right answers. Ladybirds 5–8: getting trickier.
Inner work. Patience, integrity, resilience, leadership. Ideal for P4C. Ladybirds 9–12: genuinely challenging.
In every chapter, Zoe follows the same pattern: she pauses, she notices, she chooses. This is her Guardian Moment. Rather than asking "what did this chapter teach?", ask pupils: "Which moment did Zoe pause before acting? What did she notice? What did she choose, and why?" This framework gives children a precise vocabulary for Zoe's character that they can apply across all twelve chapters.
Each prompt names the source fable and offers a discussion question rooted in both the fable and the chapter narrative.
Bloom's level tags indicate the primary cognitive demand. Questions at Analyse, Evaluate, and Create are HOTS (Higher-Order Thinking Skills).
Every animal judges Zoe before she has done a single thing. How does what we expect to see change what we actually notice? Can you think of a time when your first impression turned out to be wrong?
A character is not believed, not because they are lying now, but because of what they have done before. Is it ever fair to judge someone by their past? When does a reputation become a trap?
The fastest animal does not win the Great Meadow Race. What is the difference between being quick and being ready? Who in this chapter mistakes speed for skill?
The gate between the farmyard and the Jubilee meadow has swollen shut. The animals push harder; Zoe tries something different. What does this chapter say about the difference between pressure and patience?
When the obvious approach to the barn garlands fails, Zoe thinks differently. What does it mean to think differently? Is the cleverest solution always the right one?
Oscar designs a fair challenge, but wanting to win changes how some animals behave. How can wanting something good lead to doing something we are not proud of? Who in this chapter loses more than the prize?
At the orchard walk, a character pretends not to want the very thing they couldn't reach. Is that kind of pretending dishonest, or is it a way of protecting yourself? Which is it here?
No animal wins the tug of war on their own. What is the difference between doing something together and simply doing it at the same time? What makes unity more than just proximity?
The evening before the Jubilee, impatience threatens to destroy what has been carefully built. What is the difference between excitement and impatience? What gets lost when we rush what gives steadily?
On the morning of the Jubilee, Zoe is accused without evidence. She does not defend herself with words. Why might Zoe choose silence here? Is staying quiet the same as admitting guilt?
The storm comes without warning. The animals who refuse to bend suffer most. What is the difference between being strong and being rigid? When is it brave to bend?
Zoe leads the Jubilee parade, but she never asked to. What does this chapter tell us about the difference between claiming authority and earning it? The same fable appears in Chapter 4. What has changed between then and now?
Questions are organised by cognitive level. Use lower levels for immediate comprehension checks and upper levels for deeper discussion or written response.
HOTS (Higher-Order Thinking Skills) begins at Analyse. The Analyse, Evaluate, and Create levels require pupils to go beyond the text, reasoning, judging and making.
Words selected for their frequency in the text, their value for extending vocabulary, or their importance for understanding the themes.
HOTS extension: after defining each word, ask pupils to use it in a sentence about a character, or to identify whether Zoe, Hector, or Mable best embodies that quality, and to explain why.
Judging someone before you know them, based on how they look or what group they belong to.
Done on purpose, with careful thought. Zoe moves deliberately.
Noticing or understanding things that others miss. Old Barley is perceptive.
Staying calm and in control, especially when things are difficult.
Not wanting to do something; holding back. Hector is reluctant to trust Zoe.
Firm and unwavering; not changing even when things are hard.
Perfectly clean and tidy; without fault. Used to describe June.
Accepting something difficult without fighting it. Different from giving up.
Marked with patches of light and shade, or different colours. Describes the farmyard light.
Presented quietly; not showing off. Zoe's kindness is understated.
Five Tier 2 words per chapter, each with the sentence from the manuscript as context. Introduce these before reading, not after. Ask children what they think the word means before confirming; the inference attempt matters as much as the answer.
Source: Field Notes Teacher's Guide v5 · Merevale Creek Farm
One writing prompt per chapter, each with a specific grammar or craft focus drawn from the chapter text. These are optional extensions, not homework. The grammar focus is named explicitly so teachers can align them with current English unit work.
Source: Field Notes Teacher's Guide v5 · Merevale Creek Farm
Write the opening of a story about a stranger arriving somewhere new. Use at least two sentences that show how the people in that place feel, without using the word "feel". Look at how the author handles the farm's reaction in Chapter 1: "A silence settled over the farmyard; the particular kind of silence that is not peaceful at all, but full of unspoken things."
Write a short scene where someone is telling the truth but isn't being believed. Use direct speech for at least three exchanges. Vary your dialogue tags; try not to use "said" every time. Notice how each animal's reply in Chapter 2 tells you something about their character before they finish speaking.
Write a short race scene. Use long sentences when something is being done carefully and short ones when something is happening fast. In Chapter 3, Hector's overconfident charge uses short punchy sentences; Oscar's careful walk around the course beforehand uses longer, considered ones. Sentence length tells you how each character moves.
Write a short instructional text titled "How to Open a Stubborn Gate the Gentle Way". Use clear sequencing words (first, then, after, finally) and imperative verbs (pour, wait, push). Then compare your instructions with how the author shows Zoe's solution as narrative. Why might a story show a process rather than instruct it?
Write a short scene where two characters approach the same problem in different ways. Show their characters through what they do, not what they say. In Chapter 5: Oscar's calculations, Calypso's tiny paw inside the pipe, Zoe's single question: each action tells you who that character is without a word of description.
Write a short scene where someone wins something they don't quite want any more. Show their feelings through small details: what they look at, what they touch, what they don't do. The author shows Rufus's regret entirely through what he doesn't do: he watches, he sits, he does not eat. The empty plate tells you everything.
Write a short scene where someone wants something but won't admit it. Show their wanting through what they look at, what they say (and don't say), what they do with their body. In Chapter 7, Hector doesn't say he wants the berries, but the reader can see exactly that he does. Subtext is the writer's most powerful tool.
Write a short scene with at least five characters all doing something different at the same time. Help your reader keep track of who is who. In Chapter 8's tug of war, each animal has a specific position and a specific action. The reader never gets lost because each character has one clear thing they are doing.
Write the opening of a story where something will go wrong later. Plant at least two small clues the reader won't notice first time but will recognise on a second reading. Look at how Chapter 9 plants June's quiet preparedness early, before the reader knows it will matter. Foreshadowing rewards careful readers.
Write a short scene where one character accuses another without using direct words; show how everyone understands what is meant. Then have a third character defend the accused, showing their anger through what they say and how. Hector's accusation in Chapter 10 never quite becomes a statement, but everyone understands. This is one of the hardest things to write in English.
Write a short descriptive passage set during a storm. Use at least three different senses (sight, sound, touch, smell, taste). Include one simile or metaphor that captures the feeling of the storm. In Chapter 11, notice the wind, the bent reed, the noise the maypole makes that Zoe "did not find reassuring". Each sense pulls the reader deeper into the moment.
Write the final paragraph of a story. Show that the main character has changed without saying they have changed. Chapter 12 closes with Zoe knowing the butterfly is there even though she can't see it: "She had learned to know it was there." The character's growth is shown in what she now knows without seeing. A good ending shows change.
Six cube faces, each representing a different level of higher-order thinking. Each face carries question stems specific to Zoe and the Great Summer Jubilee. Print, cut, fold and glue to make physical question cubes, or use the stems as discussion cards.
Questions increase in cognitive demand from face 1 (Remember) to face 6 (Create). Use all six for a full class discussion, or select faces to target specific learning objectives.
Prints a foldable A4 cube net; cut, score, fold and glue. One cube per group works well for carousel discussions.
Pupils complete a one-page map for any character. Sections: How they look · How they act · What they say · What they want · What they learn.
KS1 (guided) and KS2 (independent). HOTS link: the "What they learn" section requires Analyse-level thinking.
Pupils read the source fable and answer: What is the same? What is different? What does the lesson look like in Merevale?
Structured response to: "Was it fair that Zoe had to prove herself?" Pupils take a position, consider the opposing view, and write a conclusion.
KS2 Years 3–4. PSHE and English combined. HOTS: structured argument requires Evaluate-level reasoning: position, counter-argument, and evidence-based conclusion.
Free to print and reproduce for classroom use. Please do not redistribute commercially.
| Skill / Theme | UK Curriculum | CASEL | Chapters |
|---|---|---|---|
| Prediction & inference | KS1/KS2 Reading: Comprehension | Self-Awareness | 1, 2, 5 |
| Character analysis | KS2 Reading: Comprehension | Social Awareness | All |
| Authorial intent & language choice | KS2 Reading: Comprehension | Self-Awareness | 3, 6, 10 |
| Sequencing & narrative structure | KS1 Reading: Comprehension | Responsible Decision-Making | All |
| Vocabulary in context | KS1/KS2 Reading: Word Reading | Self-Management | All |
| Spoken discussion & debate | KS2 Speaking & Listening | Relationship Skills | 5, 8, 11, 12 |
| Persuasive writing (Worksheet 3) | KS2 Writing: Composition | Responsible Decision-Making | 12 |
| Prejudice & fairness | KS1/KS2 PSHE | Social Awareness | 1, 10 |
| Empathy & perspective-taking | KS1/KS2 PSHE | Social Awareness | 2, 6, 9 |
| Resilience & self-reliance | KS2 PSHE | Self-Management | 4, 8, 11 |
| Courage & moral decision-making | KS2 PSHE | Responsible Decision-Making | 4, 8, 10 |
| Classical literacy: fable tradition | KS2 Reading: wider reading | N/A | All |
| Philosophy for Children (P4C) | KS2 Speaking & Listening | Responsible Decision-Making | 9, 10, 11, 12 |
| Numeracy link: triangular numbers | KS1/KS2 Maths | N/A | Ladybird hunt: 1+2+…+12 = 78 |
| HOTS Question Cubes (all six faces) | KS1/KS2 Reading; Speaking & Listening | All five CASEL competencies | All |
The full statutory word lists for KS1 (Years 1–2) and KS2 (Years 3–4 and 5–6) from the National Curriculum (England) 2014.
Words highlighted in green appear in Zoe and the Great Summer Jubilee. Use this list to plan vocabulary teaching, identify decodable/exception words pupils encounter while reading, or to set pre-reading word work.
Word lists sourced directly from English programmes of study: key stages 1 and 2: National Curriculum in England (DfE, September 2013), English Appendix 1: Spelling, pp. 44, 48, 54 and 61. Book 1 indicators are based on automated word-level analysis of Zoe and the Great Summer Jubilee v1.5; root forms and common inflections are matched. Free to reproduce for classroom use.
Book 1 · Zoe and the Great Summer Jubilee
Everything you need to read Book 1 aloud with confidence: reading-level notes, conversation starters for each chapter, guidance on the sensitive themes, and what to do when a child gets stuck.
This companion is designed to sit beside you, not in front of your child. It is a tool for you, to give you confidence, spark good conversations, and help you get the most from the story together.
You do not need to use every prompt. One good question after a chapter is better than five rushed ones. Let your child lead; the prompts are starting points, not a checklist.
The book is designed for newly-confident readers in UK Years 2–4 (ages 6–9). It works equally well read aloud by an adult, read independently by a child, or read together in turns.
Ideal as a bedtime read. Adult reads all text. Child listens, asks questions, joins in on repeated phrases.
Take turns: a paragraph each, or a chapter each. Great for building reading stamina and fluency.
Confident readers can tackle this alone. The companion prompts still work well as post-chapter conversations.
Each chapter is approximately 1,300 words and takes 8–12 minutes to read aloud at a comfortable pace. The twelve chapters make twelve natural stopping points: one per bedtime, or two at a weekend.
One question per chapter. Ask after you have finished reading, not during. Give your child time to think before they answer.
"Why do you think the other animals were nervous when Zoe arrived? Have you ever felt nervous about someone before you got to know them?"
"One character isn't believed, even when they're telling the truth. Have you ever not been believed about something? How did that feel?"
"The fastest animal didn't win. What do you think is more important: going fast, or being ready? Can you think of a time when slowing down helped you do something better?"
"The gate wouldn't open when the animals pushed harder. Have you ever tried harder and harder at something and found it wasn't working? What happened when you stopped pushing?"
"Zoe solves the problem in a way nobody else thought of. Have you ever found a clever solution to something when the obvious way wasn't working?"
"Wanting to win makes some characters act in a way they're not proud of. Have you ever really wanted to win something? Did it change how you behaved?"
"A character pretends they didn't want something they couldn't have. Have you ever done that? Is it a little bit dishonest, or is it a way of being kind to yourself?"
"Nobody wins the tug of war on their own, but together they do something surprising. Can you think of something you've done with others that you couldn't have done alone?"
"The evening before the Jubilee, someone is impatient. Have you ever been so excited about something the next day that you found it hard to wait? What helped you be patient?"
"Zoe is accused of something she didn't do. She doesn't argue; she just waits. Do you think that was the right thing to do? What would you have done?"
"The storm arrives and everything gets tested. Have you ever been through something difficult that turned out to show you something about yourself you didn't know before?"
"At the beginning of the book, the animals didn't want Zoe there. By the end, she's leading the Jubilee parade. What changed, and who changed most?"
Encourage a guess from context before reaching for a definition. Zoe's vocabulary is deliberately stretching in places; this is intentional. The meaning is usually clear from the sentence around it.
Each chapter has a natural pause point roughly halfway through; look for a scene break (a line gap in the text). These are designed as breathing spaces for readers who need to stop and come back.
That is completely fine. Many children process a story quietly. You can revisit the question the next day, or not at all. The story will do its own work in its own time.
Book 1 handles the following themes. None are treated with alarm; they are shown quietly and resolved with warmth. Notes are included here in case you wish to anticipate a conversation.
The central theme. The farm animals judge Zoe by how she looks before they know her. The book never lectures about this; it simply shows prejudice being undone, slowly, by behaviour. If your child asks why the animals were frightened of Zoe, "because they didn't know her yet" is the honest and complete answer.
Zoe arrives somewhere new where she knows nobody. This may resonate with children who have changed schools or moved house. The book's message is that patience and quiet behaviour build trust, which is true, and worth saying aloud if your child identifies with Zoe's situation.
The storm in Chapter 11 arrives suddenly and is the book's most dramatic moment. There is no injury or lasting damage; the farm is restored within the chapter. If your child is sensitive to storms, you may wish to read this chapter in the daytime rather than at bedtime.
On the morning of the Jubilee, Zoe is blamed for something she did not do. The accusation is unfair and the animals who make it are wrong. The chapter does not shy away from how that feels, but it is resolved with clarity and without lasting harm. A good discussion point for children who have experienced being misunderstood or blamed unjustly.
Hector's arc, being wrong about Zoe and eventually acknowledging it, models the difficult but important act of revising a judgment. This is treated as a brave and admirable thing to do. A good discussion point for children who find admitting mistakes difficult.
Merevale Creek Farm · Book 1 · Zoe and the Great Summer Jubilee
Series fact sheet, key quotes, cover image notes, and interview Q&As. For review copies or additional assets, contact us directly.
Merevale Creek Farm is a four-book seasonal chapter-book series for newly-confident readers aged 6–9. A big, misunderstood Rottweiler arrives at a traditional British working farm and earns the trust of the animals through patient, consistent kindness, never through argument or explanation. Each of the twelve chapters retells a named public-domain fable (Aesop and equivalents), a small blue butterfly appears in every illustration, and 78 ladybirds are hidden in the pictures (one in Chapter 1, two in Chapter 2, building to twelve in Chapter 12). The theme of prejudice overcome by behaviour is shown, never stated. It is a book that entertains on the first read and rewards the third.
"A book whose structural architecture was designed from the ground up to escalate in comprehension demand across KS1 and KS2. The critical findings show where that architecture succeeds, where it introduces real challenge, and where teachers will need to provide scaffolding."
Source: Curriculum Analysis KS1/KS2 v3.2, Merevale Publishing
"Zoe is a quiet, powerful dog who helps others belong, and shows that true strength is gentle."
Source: Brand Bible v4.0, Merevale Publishing
"The central tension of prejudice undone by patient behaviour is never stated directly. It is shown. This makes it an unusually rich text for perspective-taking, inference and Philosophy for Children work."
Source: Field Notes Teacher's Guide v5, Merevale Publishing
High-resolution cover images and character silhouettes are available on request for review purposes. Please contact us at the address below. Usage is permitted for editorial coverage of the series; commercial reproduction requires written permission.
300 DPI · CMYK · 6″ × 9″ trim · Maximum 240% total ink density · Rich black (60C/40M/40Y/100K) for Zoe and Oscar
Rottweilers are one of the most stereotyped dog breeds in the UK. Using one as a gentle, brave, misunderstood hero is a deliberate choice that challenges the assumption that appearance predicts behaviour, in a way that children feel viscerally and that adult buyers recognise immediately. The breed prejudice mirrors the story's central theme. It is not incidental.
Fables are the oldest form of moral storytelling for a reason; the lesson is embedded in the structure of the story itself, not added as a note at the end. Anchoring each chapter to a named fable gives teachers a comparative text for free, gives children a sense that the story is part of something much older, and gives the series a classical-literacy foundation that is unusual in contemporary children's fiction.
One ladybird is hidden in Chapter 1's illustrations. Two in Chapter 2. Three in Chapter 3, building to twelve in Chapter 12. Total: 78 (a triangular number: 1+2+3+…+12). The back page of every book challenges readers to find all 78. It is a seek-and-find mechanic that demands re-reads, rewards patience, and gives reluctant readers a reason to linger on every page. It operates entirely in the visual layer and does not interrupt the reading experience for those who don't know about it.
A small Common Blue butterfly (Polyommatus icarus) appears in every chapter of every book. It never speaks. It is never named. It is never explained. Its meaning belongs entirely to the reader. Children debate it, parents have theories, teachers use it as a Philosophy for Children prompt. The question "what do you think it means?" is more valuable than any answer.
No. It is a story. The lesson is a consequence of the story, not its purpose. Zoe never announces the moral. No character explains what the book means. The design principle is: show, don't tell. Children who read the book without knowing anything about its themes will still finish it having experienced something. That is the test.
For review copies, high-resolution assets, author interview requests, or additional information:
Merevale Publishing
All enquiries via the contact form on this site, or directly to info@merevalecreekfarm.com
Last updated: May 2026
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Last updated: May 2026
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Last updated: May 2026
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