Pages

Tuesday 16 April 2013

The Great Escape by Megan Rix

The Great Escape
by Megan Rix


Set during the start of World War II, the story follows the adventures of Buster (a Jack Russell), Rose (a collie) and Tiger (a ginger tomcat) as they escape the trauma of being put down and start a long journey from London to Devon, in search of their owners - 2 children called Lucy and Robert, who have been sent as evacuees to live with their grandmother.

An absolutely brilliant read, with many facts about the war which will be very educational for the 9-12yr olds. For fans of Michael Morpurgo.

Megan now has another book out with a similar war theme - The Victory Dogs.

Itch by Simon Mayo

Itch
by Simon Mayo

Itchingham loves chemistry and has an unusual collection of all the table of elements - well, nearly all of them. He keeps them in shoeboxes under his bed. He gets some items from a local dealer called Cake. One of the items (arsenic) which he secretly takes into school makes the whole class sick, resulting in the school greenhouse being closed down. Another item he buys off Cake has far deadlier consequences, and Itch finds himself the centre of unwanted attention from the police and some rather unsavoury characters across the world. How can he get rid of this deadly element that is causing such devastation?

A brilliant book for 11+ set in Cornwall. Just released is the sequel Itch Rocks. Check out my review!

Itch Rocks by Simon Mayo

Itch Rocks
by Simon Mayo

Wow! This was even better than the first, Itch! The adventures and thrills just kept on coming - a 400 page rollercoaster ride! You feel sorry for poor Itch having to go through so much terror - and pain! Loads more chemistry lessons, which is good for me as I was hopeless at it as a schoolchild. Such an original storyline for this series, I think that's why I enjoy it so much - no dystopia, no wizards, no vampires!

In this second instalment (and surely not the last?!) we find Itch, Chloe and Jack under close protection provided by MI5. Itch had buried Element 126 down a well under an old school in Brighton, but there are bad people around who are desperate to know its whereabouts - desperate enough to kidnap or even kill. The return of a couple of salubrious characters, and a moment's worth of slackness in MI5 protection, mean Itch and the gang find themselves yet again in mortal danger.

Deep Oblivion by Matt Dickinson

Mortal Chaos 'Deep Oblivion'
by Matt Dickinson

The second in the Mortal Chaos series. It follows much the same pattern as the first, but with different characters. A butterfly trapped inside an unfinished high rise office block in Sydney sparks off more disastrous incidents across the world. Not as much as a page turner as the first in the series, because the story pattern is no longer a novelty, but good just the same.

If you like this, also try The Last Minute by Eleanor Updale, reviewed below.

Mockingbird by Kathryn Erskine

Mockingbird
by Kathryn Erskine


Caitlin suffers from Asperger's. She and her father are trying to come to terms with the loss of Devon, Caitlin's brother, who was killed at a school shooting. They both find a way of getting 'closure'.

Written by a lady who has a sufferer of Asperger's in her family, so can relate closely to it. However, I found I had little empathy for the characters. The father didn't seem to be very close to Caitlin, but that could've been the grieving process. Also, Caitlin has no friends - her classmates think she's a 'weirdo'. Surely she would've made friends during junior school in real life.

If Aspergers or autism interests you in a storyline, then also try The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Nighttime by Mark Haddon, The Case of the Deadly Desperados by Caroline Lawrence, and Colin Fischer by Ashley Edward Miller (reviewed below).