Quiz Questions
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Q1 of 45
What is Farm Boy a sequel to?
- The Butterfly Lion — it tells what happened to Bertie and Millie's children
- Private Peaceful — it follows the Peaceful family through the Second World War
- War Horse — it continues the story of Joey and the Narracott family a generation later
- Kensuke's Kingdom — it follows what happens to Michael after he returns from the island
Q2 of 45
Who narrates Farm Boy?
- Grandpa — Albert — tells his story to the narrator who is writing it down
- Albert Narracott himself, now an old man looking back on his life
- Joey the horse, continuing his first-person narration from War Horse
- Albert's grandson, who visits the old farm as a child and hears his grandfather's stories
Q3 of 45
What does the narrator's grandfather — Grandpa — keep and treasure from the War Horse story?
- The medals he was awarded for bringing Joey home from France
- Joey himself, now old and retired, still living in the field behind the farmhouse
- The sketch that Captain Nicholls drew of Joey before the cavalry charge
- A letter from the German soldier who helped free Joey from No Man's Land
Q4 of 45
What machine does Grandpa receive from an American pilot during the Second World War?
- A Tiger Moth biplane — left at the farm by a USAF pilot who needed emergency repairs
- A Willys Jeep — given to him by an American airman whose plane he helped repair
- A military motorcycle — traded for farm produce by a passing American soldier
- A radio set — given so the farm could communicate with the nearest airfield
Q5 of 45
What does the American pilot teach Grandpa?
- How to shoot accurately — the pilot was a competition marksman
- How to navigate by stars — essential knowledge for a farmer whose compass broke
- How to fly the Tiger Moth — a skill he uses secretly for the rest of his life
- How to maintain and repair aircraft engines — knowledge Grandpa treasures for life
Q6 of 45
What happens to Joey in Farm Boy?
- Joey is still alive — ancient and beloved — at the farm where Albert has always kept him
- Joey has been sold again but Albert tracks him down a second time
- Joey dies peacefully at the farm — the story closes with his burial in the field
- Joey went blind in old age but Albert never let him go
Q7 of 45
What does the narrator do as a boy at the farm that connects him to Joey?
- He races Joey across the top field — a tradition that goes back to Albert's boyhood
- He rides Joey for the last time — the final ride before Joey becomes too old
- He sleeps in the stable with Joey during a thunderstorm, just as Albert once did
- He feeds and grooms Joey every visit, learning to trust and love him as Albert did
Q8 of 45
What wartime threat does the farm face during the Second World War in the story?
- The farm's horses are at risk of being taken for the war effort again
- A government order threatens to requisition the farm for military use
- German bombers use the valley as a navigation point and frequently pass overhead
- An American airfield is built nearby, bringing both danger and unexpected friendships
Q9 of 45
How does Farm Boy handle the relationship between the two World Wars?
- It focuses only on the Home Front, keeping both wars at a distance from the main story
- It shows them as the same tragedy repeated — Albert survived the first war to live through the second, and the family's vulnerability connects both conflicts
- It treats them as separate events with no connection to the Narracott family
- It presents the Second World War as entirely different in character to the First — more just and less wasteful
Q10 of 45
What is the emotional tone of Farm Boy compared to War Horse?
- Farm Boy has the same emotional intensity as War Horse — it is not a quieter book
- Farm Boy is gentler and more nostalgic — it is an old man's grateful memory rather than a young man's desperate survival
- Farm Boy is more political — Morpurgo uses the sequel to address topics War Horse avoided
- Farm Boy is darker — it focuses on the losses of the Second World War more directly
Q11 of 45
What does Grandpa — Albert — call the farm that has been in the family for generations?
- The farm has no name — in the Narracott family tradition farms are identified only by their owner's name
- Joey's Farm — named informally after the horse who made the family famous
- Narracott Farm — the family name on the gate since his father's time
- Higher Mill Farm — named for the old mill in the bottom field
Q12 of 45
What significant change comes to the English countryside during the Second World War sections of the novel?
- All the young men leave for the war — the village is emptied of everyone Albert grew up with
- German bombs destroy the village church — a scene Grandpa describes with great sadness
- American soldiers arrive and an airfield is built nearby — changing the landscape Albert has farmed all his life
- The farm is requisitioned by the government to grow food for the war effort
Q13 of 45
How does the narrator's relationship with Grandpa differ from what we might expect between a child and an elderly person?
- It is unusually deep — Grandpa tells the narrator everything, treating him as an equal capable of understanding adult stories
- It is distant — they rarely spend time together and communicate mainly through letters
- It is formal — Grandpa is reserved and only shares stories when directly asked
- It is competitive — the narrator must prove he deserves to hear the stories by completing farm tasks
Q14 of 45
What does the narrator notice about Grandpa that suggests how the war changed him?
- Grandpa rarely speaks of Joey without also mentioning the men who didn't come back — the horse and the lost men are connected in his memory
- Grandpa is seemingly unchanged — the narrator is surprised that the war left so little visible mark
- Grandpa is obsessed with the war — he speaks of little else and it dominates his personality
- Grandpa never speaks of it — the silence is a sign the war affected him too deeply
Q15 of 45
What is the dominant emotional tone when the narrator visits the farm as an adult looking back?
- Regret — he wishes he had listened more carefully when he was young
- Ambivalence — the narrator is not sure whether the stories he was told were always true
- Sadness — the farm has changed beyond recognition and the visits feel like a different world
- Warm gratitude — the visits are remembered with deep affection as foundational to who he became
Q16 of 45
How does Farm Boy use the relationship between generations to explore what is passed down by family?
- The novel argues that farming skills are the most valuable inheritance because they are practical and lasting
- It shows that nothing practical is passed between generations — each generation must learn for itself
- The generational structure is a frame device without thematic significance
- By showing the narrator learning both the farm's history and Joey's story from his grandfather, Morpurgo suggests that memory and love are the most important inheritances — not land or money but story
Q17 of 45
What does Joey's continued presence on the farm represent in the novel's emotional logic?
- A practical matter — farm horses were common until the 1950s and Joey is simply a working animal
- Joey is the living connection between Albert's wartime experience and his peacetime life — as long as Joey lives, the promise Albert made and kept remains present, and his death will mark the end of something irreplaceable
- Joey is kept as a tourist attraction — visitors come to see the famous warhorse from the story
- Joey represents the burden of the past — Albert cannot fully move on while the horse is there
Q18 of 45
How does the American pilot's appearance change the novel's perspective on war?
- The American pilot is included to appeal to American readers of the War Horse story
- The American introduces a different kind of war story — not trenches and loss but technology, flight and an unexpected friendship across national boundaries, suggesting that war creates human connections as well as destroying them
- The American represents American imperialism — Morpurgo is critical of the USAF presence in England
- It does not — the American is a minor character who adds colour without thematic significance
Q19 of 45
What does Farm Boy suggest about the power of storytelling within families?
- That children are better at listening to stories than adults and family bonds depend on children's attention
- That family stories are often exaggerated and unreliable — the narrator is not sure how much to believe
- That some stories are too painful to share and the best families know what not to say
- That the stories families tell each other are the mortar that holds generations together — Albert's stories of Joey and the war give the narrator a sense of who he is and where he comes from
Q20 of 45
How does Farm Boy use the transition from horse-farming to mechanised farming to comment on the passage of time?
- Mechanisation is presented as purely positive — it makes farming easier and more productive
- The arrival of tractors and machines marks the end of an age — the age in which horses like Joey were central to agricultural life; Grandpa's memory bridges this transition, and the novel uses it to suggest that what is lost when technology changes the world is not just practical but deeply human and relational
- The mechanisation theme is not in Farm Boy — it is set before tractors became common
- Technology is presented as threatening — Grandpa resists it throughout
Q21 of 45
What does the American pilot episode reveal about the way the Second World War differs from the First in Grandpa's experience?
- The American pilot brings something the First World War did not — an unlikely friendship with a stranger from a different culture, and a gift of technology (the biplane) that offers freedom rather than death; the second war for Grandpa is less about trenches and more about unexpected human connection
- Grandpa is suspicious of the American pilot — wartime makes him distrust strangers
- The American pilot episode is included to show the USAF's contribution to the war effort
- The wars are identical in Grandpa's memory — both are simply times of fear and loss
Q22 of 45
How does the novel use the idea of heritage — what we pass to the next generation — to structure its emotional argument?
- The novel argues that the most important inheritance is story and character — Albert's stories of Joey and the war give his grandson not things but a sense of who he is and where he comes from; the farm will eventually pass to someone else but the stories are what cannot be taken away
- The heritage theme is not present — Farm Boy is simply a sequel rather than a meditation on inheritance
- Heritage is a burden in the novel — the narrator feels obligated by his grandfather's expectations
- Heritage in the novel is purely material — land and objects are the Narracott inheritance
Q23 of 45
Farm Boy is a sequel to which famous Michael Morpurgo novel?
- War Horse
- The Butterfly Lion
- Private Peaceful
- Kensuke's Kingdom
Q24 of 45
Who narrates the story of Joey the horse in Farm Boy?
- Albert himself, looking back on his life with Joey
- Joey, narrating in the first person as in War Horse
- A journalist who interviews the family after the war
- Joey's original owner's grandson, who listens to Grandpa's stories about the war
Q25 of 45
What has happened to Joey by the time the main narration of Farm Boy takes place?
- Joey is still alive, now used by the grandson for farm work
- Joey returned to France to be buried at the war memorial
- Joey has died of old age after a long and peaceful life on the farm
- Joey was sold after the war and his fate is unknown
Q26 of 45
What does Grandpa show the narrator that triggers the telling of the stories?
- A letter from Albert's wartime commander praising Joey's bravery
- The original saddle Joey wore during his service in France
- A painting of Joey that a French artist completed during the war
- An old photograph and Joey's military medal, kept all these years
Q27 of 45
How is the relationship between grandfather and grandson central to Farm Boy's structure?
- They are estranged and the stories are told reluctantly under pressure
- The grandson's questions draw out stories from Grandpa, making intergenerational storytelling the novel's mechanism
- The grandson is largely absent — the novel focuses entirely on flashback
- The grandson already knows all the stories and merely records them for posterity
Q28 of 45
What tone does Morpurgo create in Farm Boy compared to the original War Horse?
- More action-packed and faster-paced, building on the excitement of the original
- More elegiac and reflective — a quieter, autumnal story of memory and gratitude rather than dramatic adventure
- Darker and more pessimistic, suggesting the war's damage was never truly healed
- Lighter and more comic, treating the war events as distant and unserious
Q29 of 45
What does Joey's life on the farm after the war represent in the novel?
- The waste of a war horse's talents in mundane agricultural work
- The possibility of peace, healing and return after trauma — that ordinary life can be reclaimed
- Albert's failure to properly honour Joey's wartime service
- The British farming tradition that the war was fought to protect
Q30 of 45
How does Farm Boy treat the passing of time thematically?
- As something that should not erase the stories and sacrifices of the past, which storytelling preserves
- As healing — the further we get from the war, the less it matters
- As cyclical — each generation repeats the mistakes of the last
- As inevitable loss, since all characters and even memory itself eventually fade
Q31 of 45
How does Farm Boy demonstrate Morpurgo's belief in the importance of storytelling as an act of love?
- The novel is ambivalent about storytelling — some of Albert's stories cause the narrator distress
- Albert's willingness to tell his grandson everything — the good and the difficult — is the novel's central act of love; the stories are gifts that equip the narrator for his own life, and Morpurgo presents this transmission of memory as the most important thing one generation can do for another
- It does not — Farm Boy is a simple sequel without philosophical depth about storytelling
- Farm Boy presents storytelling as therapeutic — Albert tells his stories to process his own grief rather than to give his grandson anything
Q32 of 45
How does the novel use the passing seasons on the farm to structure its emotional movement?
- The farm's seasonal rhythm — planting, growing, harvesting, winter rest — mirrors the novel's emotional rhythm, from the energy of remembered wartime to the quieter acceptance of age and ending, suggesting that life on the land teaches a patience with time that wars disrupt and steal
- The seasons are used specifically to mark the years of Joey's ageing, connecting each season to a stage of his decline
- Morpurgo uses the seasons to contrast the timelessness of farm life with the historical specificity of the wars
- The seasons are a background detail without structural significance
Q33 of 45
How does Farm Boy demonstrate that a sequel can achieve something its original cannot by changing the narrative perspective?
- By shifting from Joey's first-person animal narration to a human narrator receiving the story from Albert, Morpurgo is able to show what War Horse's perspective could not — the human lifetime shaped by the promise kept, the way love of an animal can become the foundation of a whole character; the sequel is not a lesser War Horse but a different and complementary work
- The perspective change is a practical decision — Morpurgo could not sustain the horse's voice for a second novel
- Farm Boy is superior to War Horse because human narration is more reliable than animal narration
- It does not — sequels are always inferior to originals and Farm Boy suffers by comparison to War Horse
Q34 of 45
What does the presence of Joey as a very old horse in Farm Boy contribute to the novel's meditation on time and mortality?
- Joey's age is a continuity detail without thematic significance
- The old Joey is less emotionally powerful than the young Joey — the novel's peak is in War Horse
- An old Joey is the novel's most powerful image — the living proof that the promise was kept, the war was survived, and love endures; but his great age also means his death is coming, and the novel holds both things at once: Joey as testament to survival and Joey as the last connection to a world that is passing; his existence is simultaneously triumphant and elegy
- Joey's age creates practical difficulties for the plot — he cannot be ridden or worked
Q35 of 45
Farm Boy is structured as a story within a story. What does this nested narrative form allow Morpurgo to explore?
- A technical device with no particular thematic significance
- The unreliability of memory, suggesting Grandpa's account cannot be trusted
- The superiority of first-hand experience over second-hand stories
- The way memory, love and oral tradition transmit experience across generations — making the past alive in the present
Q36 of 45
How does the Devon farm setting function symbolically in both War Horse and Farm Boy?
- As a symbol of Britain's imperialist agricultural exploitation
- As a realistic portrait of early twentieth-century British agricultural life
- As a contrast to the industrial modernisation that the war helped accelerate
- As the Eden that exists before and after the hell of war — natural, enduring, offering restoration that the industrial world cannot provide
Q37 of 45
What does the grandfather's insistence on telling the stories suggest about Morpurgo's view of how we should relate to the past?
- That personal memory is more important than official historical records
- That remembering painful history is a moral duty and an act of love — forgetting is a kind of betrayal
- That war stories should be told only to warn against future conflict, not to celebrate the past
- That the elderly are self-indulgent in dwelling on past trauma rather than looking forward
Q38 of 45
In what way does Farm Boy revise or add depth to the story told in War Horse?
- It corrects factual errors in the original account and gives a more accurate picture of Joey's service
- It reveals the aftermath and the ongoing impact on a family and community, showing that the story did not end with the Armistice
- It contradicts War Horse by suggesting Albert's relationship with Joey was not as exceptional as originally portrayed
- It is mainly a commercial continuation with little thematic development beyond the original
Q39 of 45
How does Morpurgo use animals in his fiction — as seen in Farm Boy, War Horse and The Butterfly Lion — to explore human themes?
- Animals provide excitement and adventure, attracting young readers who might otherwise avoid historical fiction
- Animals embody unconditional loyalty and innocent suffering that make visible the moral stakes of human choices and conflicts
- Animals are used primarily to critique human treatment of the natural world from an environmental perspective
- Morpurgo anthropomorphises animals to make complex emotions accessible, but this is a stylistic device rather than a thematic statement
Q40 of 45
The novel's short length and gentle pace have been compared to a poem or a fable. How does this form serve the content?
- A fable-like structure signals to readers that the events are allegorical rather than realistic
- The brevity suggests the story lacks the substance for a full-length novel
- The short form was a commercial compromise rather than an artistic decision
- A distilled, quiet form mirrors the subject of reflection and remembrance — unhurried, as grief and gratitude require
Q41 of 45
What does Joey's death — handled quietly off the page — suggest about Morpurgo's approach to loss in his fiction?
- That Joey's death is less important than his life, making extended treatment unnecessary
- That grief is most powerful when not dramatised — restraint and implication can be more moving than explicit emotion
- That Morpurgo avoids difficult emotional content in order to protect his young audience
- That the novel was running short and the ending was rushed
Q42 of 45
Farm Boy has been read as a meditation on what the First World War cost ordinary rural communities. What evidence supports this reading?
- The loss of young men and horses from farming communities disrupted a way of life that never fully recovered
- Morpurgo focuses on military strategy rather than its domestic impact
- There is little evidence for this reading — Farm Boy is primarily a children's adventure story
- The novel celebrates the war as necessary and transformative for rural communities
Q43 of 45
How does the intergenerational structure of Farm Boy reflect a key concern in Morpurgo's wider writing?
- The obligation of each generation to understand and honour the experiences of those who came before, especially those marked by war
- An academic interest in oral history methodology that Morpurgo brings to fiction
- The inevitability of generational conflict and misunderstanding between old and young
- The superiority of the older generation's values over those of the contemporary world
Q44 of 45
In what sense is Farm Boy a novel about gratitude?
- It asks us to be grateful for peace, for animals who served humans without choice, and for those who remembered them
- Gratitude is only a minor theme — the novel is mainly an adventure story
- It presents gratitude as insufficient compensation for wartime sacrifice — the wound cannot be healed
- It is primarily concerned with grief rather than gratitude
Q45 of 45
How does the final image of the novel — Grandpa's final act of storytelling — leave the reader?
- With sadness that the war generation is almost entirely gone and their stories will be lost
- With ambiguity about whether the grandson truly understands the significance of what he has been told
- With a political message about the futility of all wars that Morpurgo wants readers to act upon
- With a sense that love and memory can outlast death, and that stories are the means by which this is achieved