As a bookseller and a parent, you know you're safe with a Michael Morpurgo book. I would have quite happily passed this straight to my 11-yr-old without reading it first, but a)she has far too many books to read already (but I guess I do too) and b) I wanted to read it first!
The book must be one of Morpurgo's longest - 437 pages! Even though some passages were, I thought, a little over-long, I thoroughly enjoyed the book. Yet again, Morpurgo draws on fact to create a brilliant piece of story-telling. It is 1915. Merry lives in New York with her mum and dad, but her dad has gone to join the war. They soon get news from him that he has been injured and is recovering in a hospital in London. Merry and her mama know immediately that they must go to be with him, and so they book a cabin on the passenger ship 'The Lusitania', ignoring the warnings from other family members about how the war is being fought both on land and at sea. They should have listened to the warnings, as just as the ship approaches Ireland, disaster strikes.
In the Isles of Scilly, Alfie and his dad, Jim, are out in their little sailing boat trying to find some mackerel to take back to Alfie's mum. They sail past the uninhabited island of St Helen's, and hear a very strange sound coming from a disused and derelict building. On investigation, they find a young girl, half starved, frightened and injured. She is unable to talk, so they take her home to tend to her injuries and to feed her. She remains mute and appears not to know who she is or where she has come from. Alfie and his parents decide to keep the girl with them until she recovers, but soon the villagers start talking and accusing and start to turn against them. Why has this silent young girl stirred up such anger amongst the villagers, and how will they all learn the true story of how she got to be on the island?
Another wonderful book from the master of storytelling.
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