With brave Straggler standing watch for the deadly weasel, Sprout broods the egg, thinking, "My dreams are coming true." But after the egg hatches, she begins to comprehend that Baby, as she calls him, will grow to become Greentop, a duckling with his own destiny. The other duck is killed, but Sprout finds her egg. The lonely Sprout decides to follow Straggler and one of the other ducks out beyond the farm. That night, Sprout slips into the barn with the other farm animals, but she’s shunned. She’s in danger of being scavenged by a weasel. In her discontent, Sprout grows morose, frail, only to find herself culled from the flock and tossed into the "Hole of Death." Sprout, near suffocation, hears a warning from Straggler, a stray mallard duck tagging along with the farm’s other ducks. She has given herself the name Sprout because she "wanted to do something with her life, just like the sprouts on the acacia tree," something she only sees in her rare glimpses of the world outside flourishing in the barnyard. Sprout yearns for freedom, for a chance to mother one of the eggs taken from her. Sprout’s a caged laying hen on a small farm. Published to great success in Korea, Hwang’s short novel is an adroit allegory about life.
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