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Tuesday, 22 October 2013

Running Girl by Simon Mason

Running Girl
by Simon Mason

What a great 'whodunnit' thriller! Not sure what age it's aimed at - either teen or adult, but I'm guessing more the teen audience as it has that younger feel and the main characters are teenagers.

A young girl, Chloe, has disappeared. All that is found is a note at home 'gone for a run, back 7.30'. But she's not back at 7.30. She doesn't come back at all. Her body is found, and the hunt is on for her murderer. Schoolboy Garvie Smith used to go out with her, and he decides to try to solve the crime his own way, much to the annoyance of the detective leading the investigation, D.I. Singh. Garvie always seems to be once step ahead of the police, but also finds himself in more trouble than he may have realised.

Plenty of red herrings, dead ends - and school lessons missed! There are enough twists and turns (perhaps too many?!)  to keep you guessing to the end.

Tuesday, 15 October 2013

A Room Full of Chocolate by Jane Elson

A Room Full of Chocolate
by Jane Elson

I must admit, after reading the very first line in this book, I rolled my eyes and thought 'Oh no, not another one'. The line reads "Mum found a lump under her arm on my tenth birthday". I have read many books this year about family members ill, dying or dead and I thought I was going to have another following the same form. However, I was pleasantly surprised. I read this book in a day and quite enjoyed it. Grace, the aforementioned 10-yr-old, is sent to live with her granddad on a farm while her mum is treated in hospital for cancer. There, she meets the very colourful Megan, and they become best of friends. But Grace misses her mum, so Megan helps her plan a way of seeing her again.

Parts of the story reminded me of The Secret Hen House Theatre by Helen Peters, which is also set on a farm, and which my daughter and I both loved.

A strong exciting debut from a new author.

Thursday, 10 October 2013

Lockwood & Co - The Screaming Staircase by Jonathan Stroud

Lockwood & Co - The Screaming Staircase
by Jonathan Stroud

Ooh, this is a scary one. It's marketed for 9-12s, but I'm not sure I'd give it to my just turned 11-year old yet! But if your child likes to be spooked, then go ahead. The whole book is on a par with the first chapter of Spook's Apprentice by Joseph Delaney (a great series), which I also found quite scary and warn the young ones about (we keep it in our teen section at work).

Saying that, I really enjoyed this book. Lockwood & Co are a group of 3 children who are hired to dispose of ghosts, poltergeists, basically anything paranormal. It's set in modern day London where the 'Problem' (ie, hauntings) is rife. However, it is only children who have strong powers of sensing the paranormal, so they are trained to go out specifically to remove the Problem. The adults hover in safety at the front door.

After a job goes slightly wrong and the media backlash is brutal, Anthony, Lucy and George struggle to keep their business afloat. That is until they are approached by the famous Mr Fairfax, who employs them to get rid of many 'Visitors' from his ancient home. The only thing is, the previous children who've attempted the job have not come out alive. Will the 3 young ghost hunters survive the night's ordeal?

This is the first book in a series, and I look forward to reading the next one!



Saturday, 5 October 2013

Geek Girl: Model Misfit by Holly Smale

Geek Girl: Model Misfit
by Holly Smale

(by Megan, age 11)

The sequel to Geek Girl is an amazing story that links up with the first book, and it's still my absolute favourite!!!

Harriet can't cope with her life anymore; she's been dumped, she might be getting fired at any time, Annabel her step-mum has pushed her away to Japan for a modelling job because she's expecting a baby...

Will things all come clear at the end for Harriet? Or will her life be even more geeky and lonely than ever???


I definitely recommend this AMAZING book to any girl on earth!!!

Thursday, 3 October 2013

When The Guns Fall Silent by James Riordan

When The Guns Fall Silent
by James Riordan

A hard-hitting, graphic and, at times, upsetting account of soldiers on the front line during the First World War. Nothing is held back from the 'telling it as it is' way of storytelling. You may have read fantasy and science fiction stories of monsters or zombies tearing people's limbs off and blood pumping out of wounds, and 12-yr-olds probably love that horror and gore. Yet when the same imagery is used to describe soldiers being blown to pieces, decapitated by shrapnel, or taking their own lives because they can't take the horror any more, it is far more upsetting to read. The publishers mark the book as 12 plus, but I will be careful who I'll be recommending this to. There's a section about propaganda, but it is not named as such, so if a child were to read this, they would think those things actually happened - I can't describe them here because they are too appalling. 

Yet I don't want you to think that this book shouldn't be read by children. It's educational, it's shocking, you learn the difference between the soldiers on the front line eating dry biscuits and sometimes drinking rain water mixed with blood in the trenches, and the senior officers in their cosy warm cottages eating roast dinners and drinking port. The title of the book refers to Christmas Day 1914, when the German and British soldiers decide to call a day's truce, and come together to play football and shake hands on No Man's Land. They are friends one day, but enemies the next. At the start of each chapter, there is a moving poem written by war poets, for example Wilfred Owen, and these short bursts of prose add to the solemnity of the book.

The book was first published in 2000, and has been re-released ready for publication in 2014 - the centenary of the First World War. The author James Riordan died in 2012 aged 66.

Tuesday, 1 October 2013

Stay Where You Are, & Then Leave by John Boyne

Stay Where You Are & Then Leave
by John Boyne

We'll probably see an abundance of stories and biographies set during the First World War over the next year, as of course 2014 marks its centenary. Add to that the fact that there are many war stories for children on the market already. They can learn so much more by reading these books than I ever did in my boring History lessons at school. There is War Horse by Michael Morpurgo, Private Peaceful by Michael Morpurgo, Soldier Dog by Sam Angus, The Silver Donkey by Sonya Hartnett, and many others. Including this one.

I love John Boyne's writing. He writes both for adults and children. You'll probably have heard of his most famous - The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas, which was turned into a film. 'Stay Where You Are & Then Leave' is about Alfie. On Alfie's 5th birthday, his dad signs up to fight in the First World War. His last memory of him is seeing him stride proudly into their living room in full uniform, and his mother and grandmother bursting into tears and running out the room. His mother lets him read the letters his father sends back, but after a while she begins to hide them away from him, and after that the letters seem to stop altogether. Alfie's mother tells him his father is on a secret mission and is not allowed to get in touch with them. Alfie thinks this is code for his father is dead. But then he accidentally stumbles across some information which makes it apparent his mother is holding an even bigger secret from him about his father.

This is a touching book about the innocence of a young boy trying to understand the horrors of war, about conscription, of conscientious objectors and white feathers, and of mental illnesses caused by the war which were not taken seriously during that period. A wonderful, educational read.

Look out for my next review on another book about the First World War - 'When the Guns Fall Silent'.