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A Good Animal

Not yet published
Expected 24 Feb 26
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A heart-wrenching coming-of-age debut novel by a stunning new voice in fiction, for readers of Barbara Kingsolver and Ann Patchett.

In the farm country outside Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan—a border town where life moves slow and dreams run fast—most kids want out. Not Everett Lindt. He’s set on staying put, rebuilding his family’s sheep farm, and carving a future from the land he loves.

Then he meets Mary, a new girl in town with restless energy and bigger plans. When their relationship reaches a crossroads, Everett sees a life together; Mary, however, is desperate to find a way out. Together, they make an impulsive choice—one that will change everything.

Tense, lyrical, and deeply felt, Sara Maurer's unforgettable debut breathtakingly captures the ache of first love, the beauty and brutality of rural life, and how one decision can echo through generations and shape who we become.

288 pages, Hardcover

Expected publication February 24, 2026

270 people are currently reading
16992 people want to read

About the author

Sara Maurer

1 book101 followers
Sara Maurer is the author of A Good Animal, a coming-of-age novel set in Sault Ste. Marie. She lives with her family in Michigan's Upper Peninsula.

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5 stars
108 (31%)
4 stars
149 (42%)
3 stars
74 (21%)
2 stars
12 (3%)
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4 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 224 reviews
Profile Image for Karen.
755 reviews2,010 followers
January 31, 2026
It’s 1995 and Everett is 17 years old and a senior in high school.
He has been raised on a sheep farm that goes back generations in his family and he plans to stay there, make his life there.. just like his parents have, that’s his dream. He loves caring for and raising the sheep, has a close lifelong friend Charlie, and he loves Sault Ste. Marie in the upper Peninsula of Michigan where the farm is.
Mary moves to town, the daughter of a Coast Guard officer, she has moved to all different places in the states because of her dad’s job. She lives only with her dad as her parents are divorced and she’s spending her senior year there in Sault Ste. Marie and then plans to leave. She wants to be by the ocean and go to art school.
Everett falls hard for her and as their relationship becomes more serious, he tries to convince her that she could have a good life there too.
Both their plans go awry as things become more serious.
A story of the heartbreaking choices people make for love.

Thank you to NetGalley and St Martins Press for the
e-galley in exchange for my honest review.
Profile Image for Lindsay L.
879 reviews1,691 followers
December 9, 2025
4.5 stars!

I loved these characters!

1995. A small farming border town in Michigan. A generational sheep farming family with three children. In his last year of high school, the eldest son follows in his father’s footsteps on the cusp of buying into breeding lambs himself. A new girl moves to a local farm which begins a relationship that will change everything.

This is a slow burn, quiet, exquisitely written story. The characters were so very real, raw, genuine and endearing. I found myself invested in and caring for the main character immensely within a few pages. There was an honest, quiet vulnerability about him that really held my heart but he also had grit. His dedication and loyalty to his family business and land was admirable.

This book showcased farming life so brilliantly. I felt as though I was right alongside the characters. I was fascinated by the intricate detail of farm work and the sheep breeding industry. This novel will surely work better for animal lovers due to the heavy focus on farming and nature, but be warned there are some very hard to read scenes surrounding slaughter and euthanizing animals that are suffering. This is an animal centred novel, but at its core, it’s a coming of age story that will touch readers hearts with its endearing feel and genuine raw emotion.

I loved every single word of this story. My one tiny critique and why I didn’t give it 5 stars is that I would have liked a little more from the ending, but it still worked very well for me.

This book is a stand out for me this year. I am extremely impressed that this is a debut. It doesn’t publish until 2026, so be sure to mark your calendar.

Thank you to the publisher for my review copy!
Profile Image for Meagan (Meagansbookclub).
799 reviews7,436 followers
January 17, 2026
When it comes to the coming-of-age genre, it feels very hit or miss for me so I was hesitant going into this one. When I saw Michael Crouch was the narrator, I knew he was going to bring our man character Everett to life and that’s exactly what he did. At the core, this is the story of Everett on the brink of adulthood. He lives on a farm in a rural community. He loves his animals and loves the farm life. This book won’t be for everyone because I know there are readers out there that refuse to read books with animal deaths (but they’re totally fine with reading deaths of children and adults so….), but there are animal deaths. Farm life just is what it is. I think this one will be a book talked about and an author we’ll hear more of in the future.
Profile Image for Kasia.
276 reviews41 followers
November 9, 2025
**ARC of this book provided by publisher in exchange for an honest review**

You are living your life peacefully and suddenly BOOM! stories taking place in 1995 are labeled as historical fiction.

A Good Animal is fairly typical coming-of-age story with 17 year old Everett falling head over hills for Mary. The young love explodes and the only thing that mars the romance is the fact that Everett dreams about starting his own sheep farm, preferably not far from the place where he grew up, and Mary dreams about an art college in California. It sounds like a story you've already read somewhere, right? But don't make a mistake of skipping this one as the atmosphere in it is impeccable, characterization is on point and the layering of the story is subtle but powerful. I've finished reading this book two days ago and I find myself constantly thinking about it and liking it more with each passing day.

Why only 4 stars then? First of all - its definitely to short; second of all - there is more information about sheep that I ever wanted to learn ; third of all - the ending is very abrupt and left me quite dissatisfied.

To sum it up - this is a strong debut novel and I will gladly read more books from this author. Wholeheartedly recommended.
Profile Image for Jill.
376 reviews74 followers
January 26, 2026
A GOOD ANIMAL
By Sara Maurer

3.5 stars (rounded up)

As someone from Michigan who has visited the Upper Peninsula many times, I thought I had a pretty good sense of life there—but I never once considered sheep farming. The UP is a place where life moves at a slower pace, where time seems to stand still. I certainly didn’t expect to be so drawn into a novel about raising and breeding sheep, yet A Good Animal surprised me.

This coming-of-age debut is set in 1995 on a rural sheep farm outside Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan. The story follows Everett, a seventeen-year-old boy whose dreams are rooted in the land he knows—wanting to raise and breed sheep and someday have a family of his own. When Mary, a teenage girl unaccustomed to small rural towns, moves to the area with her father, Everett is immediately smitten. But while Everett’s dreams are quiet and grounded, Mary imagines a much bigger life beyond the boundaries of the UP. One impulsive decision changes the course of both of their lives.

I thoroughly enjoyed this tender coming-of-age story, and Everett quickly held a special place in my heart. A Good Animal is ultimately a story about first love, longing, and the bittersweet process of growing up. The characters felt real and meaningful. I could see this book appealing to mature YA readers as well. I’m partial to debut novels, and this one did not disappoint. I look forward to what Sara Maurer does next.

The writing style is quiet and reflective, capturing the slow pace of life in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula. Maurer’s prose is subtle and atmospheric, focusing on small moments that carry emotional weight. The tone is tender and restrained, making the story of first love and growing up feel intimate and authentic.

Thank you to NetGalley and St. Martin’s Press for the eARC.
Profile Image for Mo Reads.
273 reviews195 followers
July 31, 2025
The blurb promises ‘….a heart-wrenching coming-of-age debut novel by a stunning new voice in fiction…..’

And that’s exactly what this was. I am left with chills.

Maurer’s debut novel unfurls in an outward leisurely fashion that feels wholly natural with a country town, farm setting...

The scenery she portrays for us through her words was one of the most vivid and tactile I’ve ever “witnessed” in a book. It was breathtaking. It was lyrical.

In A Good Animal we begin in the summer of ‘95 following Everett, our MC, before he begins his senior year of high school, observing as he navigates and cherishes farm life and the land it occupies.

What transpires that summer and the months that follow are some of the most touching and genuine and playful moments. Smile-inducing moments...
And then there’s those that will wound you. The frustration, the heartbreak & heartache. It’s all there.

An emotionally opulent and authentic read. One that will stir your soul.

I was lucky enough to win this gem of an arc through GoodReads via SMP. Big thanks for that!
Sara Maurer, you are a phenomenal talent & I will be on the hook waiting for your next novel.

Pub: 2/27/26.
Profile Image for Helen.
737 reviews81 followers
October 10, 2025
4.5 stars
I was totally captivated by this story about two high school teens who experience their first love and are totally consumed by each other, as first loves usually are. Both are polar opposites but their connection is real. Their passion and devotions are all consuming. What started out as sweet and pure is later tainted by life choices made and tragic circumstances. I was surprised to learn that this book, A Good Animal, is a debut novel. I cannot wait to read more by this author, Sara Maurer.
Thank you to Netgalley and the publisher for an advanced reader’s copy. The opinion expressed is my own.
Profile Image for Stacey.
369 reviews13 followers
September 28, 2025
Thank you to NetGalley and the publisher for the opportunity to read this book in exchange for an honest review.

This book is set on the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, Sault Saint Marie. The book suggests the area to be remote and somewhat thrown back in time. Everett and Joe are farm boys who work the fields in summer and raise their 4H animals for fair. I grew up in WI and can easily imagine Everett. I felt his love of the land and his life as a farmer. He comes from a farm family, with hard working class parents and two siblings. He shares his father’s passion for sheep and the life they have created. His love for the animals was sincere, and provided a backdrop for his story. Life is as it should be.

Then Mary comes to town. She is exotic in that she is from a broken family and had moved around the country, she is distant and different. She has dreams to go to art school and the big city. She is spending her senior year in Sault Ste Marie and piques Everett’s curiosity. At first she rebuffs his interest but eventually he tears down her walls and they become everything. Everett wants a future like his parents and Mary wants to leave. Everett’s desperation for Mary leads him to make some poor, risky decisions, but at his heart he is so good. It’s hard to know who to root for here as I want everything to be okay. This is a painful and bittersweet story but it was so well written, I could feel the characters anguish as they navigated growing up.
Profile Image for Ellen Ross.
513 reviews55 followers
July 31, 2025
I received an advance review copy for free, and I am leaving this review voluntarily. What a fascinating plot this book had. I loved the farm country setting and the fact that this was a coming-of-age book but once I met the characters that’s what really drew me in. The relationship between Everett and Mary sucked me right in and the gut wrenching result of an impulsive choice had me so emotional. This is a book that you will think about long after you finish. I miss the characters and I want to read it again and again just to reunite with them.
Profile Image for Angie Miale.
1,149 reviews160 followers
November 13, 2025
A haunting, atmospheric debut novel set in Sault Ste Marie of the upper peninsula. Set in 1995, this is about a high school senior, Everett, who falls head over heels for the new girl, Mary. He wants nothing more than to stay and work on his family's sheep farm. He wants to breed them and sell them and have a nice farm. The problem is, Mary has no desire to stay and wants to go to California.

Vivid yet simplistic in its descriptions, if you are nostalgic about simple farm life, you will love this book. Or if you are really interested in sheep farming, because the details are real. Everett is a simple young man, he is high on integrity and low on thinking things through.

The sensitive subject matter is, unfortunately, too much of a spoiler to reveal as it is not introduced until 90% of the way through. This would be a great book for book clubs who enjoy deliberate novels with open ended questions. I may be missing some symbolism here- but the title "a good animal" is a double entendre and the farm community is regionally specific.

The ending, while abrupt, is a breath of fresh air and leaves the reader with ambiguity and questions. The pacing is reminiscent of Wild Dark Shore or Broken Country.

Thank you to St. Martin's Press for the ARC in exchange for an honest review. Book to be published 2/24/26
Profile Image for Kaitlyn Barrett.
492 reviews6 followers
November 30, 2025
Based on the synopsis, I did not know that I would be reading a book that’s 60% about sheep. I feel like the synopsis is misleading. I couldn’t get on board once the narrator/MC sexually assaulted his girlfriend and kicked a sheep. The writing was good but I did not like this.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Anna.
968 reviews42 followers
January 5, 2026
4.75⭐️

A GOOD ANIMAL is quietly beautiful; powerful in its simplicity with no shortage of soul shattering moments.

I’m a city girl who married into a family with deep roots in dairy farming. I’m no stranger to the Upper Peninsula of Michigan and I’ve heard numerous firsthand stories from relatives who have shown livestock at county and state fairs. The detailed depiction of farm life is authentic and does not shy away from the often hard choices that are part of this life. Some readers may find a few of the scenes difficult while others recognize them as part of the natural life cycle of farm animals.

This is a coming of age story that pulls the reader in so completely thus making it impossible to put it down or, in my case, stop listening. It is Everett’s story. Everett for whom raising lambs is the only life he’s known and the only life he wants. His dreams extend no further than making a home on the land, securing a genetically superior ram, and breeding prize winning lambs.

And then he meets Mary.

Newly arrived in their small town in the UP, Mary has moved a lot and has no desire to stay in Chippewa County. Her dreams take her far from farm life to college and beyond. Everett thinks a summer with Mary will be enough, but then it’s not.

What happens when one wants to stay and the other wants to go? For young people on the cusp of adulthood there are more questions than answers. And none of them are simple.

Michael Crouch’s narration is spectacular as I’ve come to expect from him. He voices Everett’s emotions and brings the reader along on this incredibly journey. Did I cry? More than once and not where I expected to. I felt it all and will need some time to reassemble my shattered heart.

Thank you to NetGalley, St. Martin’s Press, and Macmillan Audio for the gifted advance copies. All opinions are my own.
Profile Image for Debbi.
471 reviews119 followers
November 7, 2025
Set in rural Michigan, this story could be set anywhere in the US. The rural life is never easy. Everett is a senior in high school and is living his best life on his family sheep farm. He and his best friend Charlie work hard at seasonal jobs. He dreams of continuing the family legacy, breeding and showing sheep. When he meets Mary, who is new to the town, he falls in love. He longs to bring her into the fold. Their dreams are different. This is a coming of age story set in the nineties, although it often it felt like the sixties.
The first half the book is focused on sheep farming. I struggled to guess where the story was going. It's is a story about crossroads, hopes and disappointments. The human characters were slightly underdeveloped, the sheep were the stars. The writing is good, the pacing uneven
and there is more sadness than joy in this story.
Thanks to Netgalley and the publisher for an advance reader copy
Profile Image for Ivy Withers Esterly.
67 reviews4 followers
November 8, 2025
Thank you to NetGalley for this ARC!

An emotional, coming-of-age struggle that reflects on how we continue the mistakes our parents make and the tumultuous feeling of teenage love.

Everett has barely gone farther than the coast of the upper peninsula, content to stay forever on his family’s sheep farm for the rest of his life. Mary is new to town after having constantly moved throughout the country for the majority of her life due to her father’s job. Everett is mesmerized by how different Mary is from the girls he grew up with. Mary is desperate for the slightest bit of attention. Their care free obsession with each other leads to choices that will alter the course of their lives forever.

I cannot even begin to explain how much I loved this book. I felt understood by Everett and how he sees the world through the lens of his upbringing on his farm. The side characters, particularly his best friend Charlie, were so realistically portrayed as to how Midwesterners will react and act to situations. Mary was the perfect foil to what was familiar to Everett, throwing his life into up upheaval. It made me think about how do we make choices and how, sometimes, choices are made for us. And that ending LEFT ME FEELING RAW. Absolutely, absolutely phenomenal.
Profile Image for Pamela Lopez.
44 reviews
August 17, 2025
I will say that the premise of this book is a classic coming of age story that is well thought out. But the first entire half of they book really leans in heavy with farm culture that I just think if it was cut back to not take up the majority the of the book it would’ve allowed the main plotline of the story to be thoroughly told. I felt that the problem that the protagonists go through was wrapped up quickly and didn’t allow for room to breathe really go into the intricacies of teen/young adult pregnancy. It also had a problem with character development I think there were too many characters that just didn’t get enough time for us to really care about most of them given that the first half really took too much space to educate us on sheep herding. But having said that it really did capture Midwest/southern America and the writing did paint a vivid picture and really took me there to these places. But yeah it was an ok read just cutting back on the farm culture would’ve helped a lot for this book
Profile Image for Whitney Hubble.
116 reviews
January 8, 2026
3.5 ⭐️ This was a very well-written debut novel. A tender coming-of-age story about a teenage sheep farmer named Everett, and the all-consuming experience of first love. The beginning pulled me in completely, and I can totally see the connection/ likeness to Barbara Kingsolver, but this novel definitely did not move me in the way Demon Copperhead did. Sara Mauer’s writing felt authentic to farm life in the 90s (granted, I know very little about it to say for sure), and her characters were painfully real.

👍🏻 Pros: Mauer wrote the perfect teenage boy on the cusp of adulthood. Everett thinks he has it all figured out, has a plan for his life, and believes himself to be more mature and ready for the real world than he actually is. Anytime he made a questionable decision or voiced an unreasonable opinion, it was hard to feel frustrated because that’s exactly what a teenage boy should do. While he grapples with some very serious situations, they feel even more life-altering because he doesn’t truly have the maturity or experience needed to handle them responsibly.

👎🏻 Cons: The book was too short, and the story felt very rushed at the end. You spend over half of the book getting to know the characters, their town, the land, and the animals, and it’s truly beautiful. I wish the same time and care had gone into the second half of the book. Ultimately, I was left wanting more and not completely satisfied in the end.

While this wasn’t the emotionally life-changing read I had hoped it would be, I did enjoy it and would be eager to read more from Sara Mauer in the future.

Big thank you to #NetGalley and #MacmillanAudio for this advanced listener’s copy of #TheGoodAnimal 📖
Profile Image for Traci Co.
131 reviews22 followers
August 27, 2025

I received an advanced copy of this book through a giveaway on Goodreads.

A Good Animal promises and delivers on a coming-of-age story that is so well told, reminding me of the story-telling inflections you experience when reading William Kent Krueger. The story is well-paced and brings with it a sense of relatability and youthful nostalgia. Taking care of animals, hauling hay, stealing moments to go fishing, sitting around the fire pit on cool evenings… the seasonal flavors that come with rural living were so fully captured. I was drawn into the characters, their emotional responses, their mishaps, their thoughtful moments, and the manner in which they approach the demands of the different aspects of their lives.

I enjoyed this book and would read any future novels of Sara Maurer in hopes of having a similar reading experience to what I had with A Good Animal.

Thank you to Sara Maurer and St. Martin’s Press Group for providing me this review opportunity.
Profile Image for Anne Wolfe.
798 reviews60 followers
Read
January 7, 2026
How often does a book like A Good Animal come along? Rarely. It is one in which you enter the author's world and do not leave until the last page is turned and the last deep sigh has left your lungs. What makes it even more impressive, particularly for a first novel, is the fact that Sara Maurer has succeeded marvelously in writing in the voice of a seventeen-year-old youth. There is not one false note in this emotional and moving story.

The setting is the Eastern Michigan's Upper Peninsula, a sheep farm where Everett lives with his parents and younger brother and sister. The family works hard to help raise these show sheep and I fell in love with all of them. including Fluffernutter, the rejected lamb raised by young sister Katie. (Fluff is delightful as well as beautiful and wins Reserve Champion at the County Fair.)

Maurer's writing is so skilled that the animals have as much life as the human characters. She never puts a foot wrong. . I loved Roman, the baby ram Everett buys to start his own breed line of show sheep, and disliked Caroline, the bossy old ewe. There is also Charlie, childhood best friend, Kylie, Charlie's girlfriend, and Mary, a new girl in town for only her senior year. The relationship between Mary and Everett is so relatable and real that you feel their emotions, their joy and their pain.

I look forward to Sara Maurer's next novel and send my appreciation to both Net Galley and St. Martin's Press for this ARC. lThis is my honest review. I loved this book.How often does a book like A Good Animal come along? Rarely. It is one in which you enter the author's world and do not leave until the last page is turned and the last deep sigh has left your lungs. What makes it even more impressive, particularly for a first novel, is the fact that Sara Maurer has succeeded marvelously in writing in the voice of a seventeen-year-old youth. There is not one false note in this emotional and moving story.

The setting is the Eastern Michigan's Upper Peninsula, a sheep farm where Everett lives with his parents and younger brother and sister. The family works hard to help raise these show sheep and I fell in love with all of them. including Fluffernutter, the rejected lamb raised by young sister Katie. (Fluff is delightful as well as beautiful and wins Reserve Champion at the County Fair.)

Maurer's writing is so skilled that the animals have as much life as the human characters. She never puts a foot wrong. . I loved Roman, the baby ram Everett buys to start his own breed line of show sheep, and disliked Caroline, the bossy old ewe. There is also Charlie, childhood best friend, Kylie, Charlie's girlfriend, and Mary, a new girl in town for only her senior year. The relationship between Mary and Everett is so relatable and real that you feel their emotions, their joy and their pain.

I look forward to Sara Maurer's next novel and send my appreciation to both Net Galley and St. Martin's Press for this ARC. lThis is my honest review. I loved this book.
143 reviews3 followers
December 20, 2025
A heart-wrenching coming-of-age novel by a stunning new voice in fiction” is how the synopsis begins and that’s exactly what this novel is.

Perhaps it’s because this small town girl grew up in farm country, where everyone looks forward to the County Fair. Or maybe it’s the fact that one of my classmate’s was from a family of sheep farmers. My God, this book took my breath away. I was totally captivated by the story line and fell in love with the well-developed characters.

Many thanks to Goodreads and St. Martin’s Press for the opportunity to read an ARC. This one cracked my heart open from the very start.
Profile Image for Christine.
224 reviews3 followers
August 12, 2025
Thank you for the advanced copy.

As a Midwesterner living in a rural area with plenty of sheep farmers and county fairs, I appreciate Maurer's beautiful and accurate description of country life. Everett, Charlie, and their families are real characters written with honest feelings. The "fish out of water," Mary, could have been over the top and unbelievable. But, she wasn't. She was insightful, clever, and vulnerable. Their love story was exciting and tender and heartbreaking - all the things first love is.
Profile Image for Cherish.
169 reviews4 followers
February 1, 2026
3.25 stars. Thanks to Netgalley for this ARC. This one took me by surprise. This is the author’s debut novel. This is definitely a slower paced novel, very slice of life. If you are someone who prefers fast paced books, this may not be for you. I did like the depth of our main character, Everett. I also enjoyed the audiobook narrator. Although I enjoyed it, it wasn’t a stand out for me, but I would recommend if you want a literary fiction novel.
Profile Image for Amanda Herzog.
70 reviews
February 4, 2026
I absolutely loved this book and didn’t want it to end.. the characters were amazing. I am so glad i picked this as my botm pick
Profile Image for Carrington Hodges.
61 reviews
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
January 12, 2026
thank you to the publisher and Net Galley for this ARC in exchange for an honest review.

I am amazed this is a debut novel! This author is a fantastic storyteller and I was enraptured reading.

A slow born for sure and check your trigger warnings. I will be looking forward to her next book!
Profile Image for Jude (HeyJudeReads) Fricano.
560 reviews124 followers
February 1, 2026
A story of family; hard-working parents who made choices long ago that continue to unfold today, while their son Everett matures and has his own choices to face. Its a story of their farm, their labor-intensive life where emotions are pushed down and result in sparse conversations and hurt feelings. When teenagers have few role models they made decisions they're not yet equipped to process. This cold, sheep farm setting leaves few choices while Everett and Mary are forced to make decisions that will last a lifetime.
489 reviews7 followers
November 7, 2025
When this book was compared to the writings of Barbara Kingsolver and Ann Patchet, and it was published by St. Martin’s Press which is one of my go-to publishers I couldn’t wait to get my hands on it. It never lived up to the writing of either author, or the St. Martin’s quality. And I am sorely disappointed. There was so much wrong with this book. The first clue was when the author said they crossed over the waters of THREE Great Lakes when crossing the Mackinac Bridge. Um, no. Lake Superior is nowhere near the Mackinac Bridge. And this author is supposedly from Michigan? This was no coming of age story because the characters never grew, or learned from their mistakes, the situations were ridiculous – giving an animal abortive to the girlfriend? – and I was bored much of the time and only kept reading because I figured it had to get better. It didn’t. I received an e-ARC from Netgalley and the publisher in exchange for an honest review. 2 stars.
Profile Image for Janine.
1,726 reviews10 followers
August 11, 2025
Poignant coming-of-age story set in Sault St. Marie, Michigan, a small town where farming and dreams of the future play a big role in a young person’s life. Such a person is Everett Lindt who loves his farming life and the raising of sheep. He has a goal to find the perfect ram to start his own breed. With his best friends, Charlie and Kylie, he enters his senior year in high school in love with Mary, a transplant from Buffalo, New York, and with other dreams. An event overwhelms the two that has a startling impact on their choices and their futures. The book is magical. I felt that I was reconnecting in a way with Willa Cather who wrote of the simple life, nature and love of land. This is truly a brilliant and well written story. I want to thank NetGalley and the publishers for allowing me to read this ARC.
Profile Image for Estibaliz.
2,597 reviews70 followers
September 4, 2025
3.75, rounded up, and thank you to St. Martin's Press and Goodreads for providing me with an Advance Readers' Edition of this book, via Giveaways. If you don't get as lucky as I did, you'll have to wait till February 24, 2026 to read this.

Honestly, even though I enjoyed this novel, I'm also a little bit torn about the final product. That's what high expectations will do to you...

'A Good Animal' is a beautiful rendered coming of age story, particularly brilliant when it comes to its depiction of Michigan, the rural life, and the connection that we, as humans, create with animals, this time from the more practical, but not less moving, point of view of the farmer's life.

However, the humans in this story are not always as engaging and captivating as the sheep were, particularly when it comes to the development of some fundamental characters to the story, like Charlie or, more important, Mary herself.

Add to that the fact that the 'one secret' that threatens Everett and Mary was actually utterly predictable and quite run of the mill when it comes to story telling, and the truth is that I couldn't get completely on board with what somehow could have been a beautiful memorable love story. And it's not that you won't keep thinking of this story once you reach the last page, but it just doesn't feel as fulfilling as I was expecting, like it couldn't reach its whole potential.

Also, and as I side note, I don't necessarily agree with the definition of this story as something "deeply American", as that feels quite reductionist. There's more Americas than the rural America, and while Sara Maurer does an incredible job when it comes to recreate that world, truth is the rural here could be easy extrapolated to any other country, when it comes to ways of living and attitudes. But that's just me being picky...

So, anyway, beautiful story, just not 100% what I was expecting after all the ravishing reviews... even though you could say I'm kind of jumping on the bandwagon too, here.
Profile Image for Herbibliomaniac.
34 reviews
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
February 4, 2026
4🌟

Heart wrenching and coming of age are great descriptors of this read. But add in a lot of farming and so many sheep. The main character, Everett, is satisfied with his life as it is and has his future planned out the way he desires. He wants to stay on his family farm, buy it off his parents, and continue to be around the sheep that he loves so much. He falls for Mary who is not on the same page, she wants a future away from where they are. This story follows almost as much about the sheep and the farm as it does the coming of age romance between these two characters. Some not well thought out choices due to a lack of a fully developed prefrontal cortex. The youthful idiocy of believing it will be fine if we do it this one time... many times. And the consequences that follow with the continuation of so many poor choices.

This was beautifully written. I always enjoy books that take on difficult topics and do them well. It felt realistic to the ages these characters were. It's full of emotion and the harsh realities of life.

Personally I am not a farm animal kind of person. I definitely learned quite a bit about sheep, but really could have done without. However, the sheep really do tie into the story. Not only do they show the love he has for them and his life, but his understanding of life and at times his thought process. Not to mention how they would contribute to his poor choices and how life can take your back up plan away in an instant.

The Narration was wonderfully done, they really brought the story to life. It was an emotional story at times and the narrator really brought those emotions out.

Thanks to Sara Maurer, Macmillan Audio and NetGalley for sending me an Alc to review.
Narrated by Michael Crouch
Profile Image for Olivia Pilling.
235 reviews1 follower
August 5, 2025
As someone who grew up in a small farm town but was very much not a farm kid this was an interesting read. The book stretches the details to make sure you understand just what kind of town this is and just what kind of people we are reading about. Farm life is a life so adjacent to most of our lives yet it is still so painfully human. Our author shows us that even with the responsibility given to kids at a young age, with all they see on a farm they and we are still not immune to being human. Knowing everything about animals is not the same as knowing everything about people.

I really enjoyed the juxtaposition of animals and people in this book, and how our male protagonist relates everything uncertain he encounters back to sheep, back to something he knows about. It is the lens he views the world & so it’s the lens we view his story. The ending especially reinforces this in such an interesting way!!

Overall this book was paced strangely but in a good way, in the same way life on a farm is I think, and I enjoyed the realism of the characters & also the fact that everything was okay (???) in the end. I was dreading finishing it because I feared the worst & I think that’s a credit to the author.

Thank you to NetGalley and the publisher for sending me an ARC of this book in exchange for my honest review!
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