KM Peyton is my one of my literary heroes. (The others, fyi, are Michelle Magorian, Patricia Leitch, Elinor M. Brent-Dyer and Frank Cottrell Boyce. But it’s not their birhtday today, and it is KM Peyton’s so I shall save them for another time.) Happy birthday KM Peyton! She’s a bit amazing she is. More thanContinue reading “Happy Birthday KM Peyton!”
Author Archives: Daisy May Johnson
Over The Rainbow: Brian Rowe
Over the Rainbow by Brian Rowe My rating: 1 of 5 stars Following LGBTQ YA month over on Once Upon A Bookcase, and the realisation that I too wanted to increase the amount of titles I read with LGBTQ protagonists, I found Over The Rainbow on Netgalley and became instantly intrigued. Any book that cameContinue reading “Over The Rainbow: Brian Rowe”
Flying, flying away (or, how amazing airport bookshops are)
I’m on holiday! Hurrah! One of the great joys of my life when I’m travelling (and when you’re travelling there are very few joys unless you’re travelling first class and have your every whim catered for) is airport bookshops. I LOVE AIRPORT BOOKSHOPS. I love the way that everybody is so rampantly desperate for thingsContinue reading “Flying, flying away (or, how amazing airport bookshops are)”
Classics and Children’s Literature #kidbkgrp
Last night at 9pm, the very new and very amazing #kidbkgrp over on Twitter got going. It’s an online chat group for people who love children’s literature – and I’d love to see you there next time (end of August ish). Keep an eye on the hashtag! (And feel free to suggest topics – IContinue reading “Classics and Children’s Literature #kidbkgrp”
Rainbow Beauty – Peppermint Kiss : Kelly McKain
Peppermint Kiss by Kelly McKain My rating: 4 of 5 stars I’ve been a little bit disappointed in the world of books for the tween-teen girl recently. I think it’s partially due to the fact that several of them (none of the worst ones have been reviewed btw) have just felt so … cheap. Like writingContinue reading “Rainbow Beauty – Peppermint Kiss : Kelly McKain”
Slog’s Dad : A Bereavement Counsellor’s Perspective
Welcome to the second post of our Slog’s Dad special! If you missed the last one, it’s available here. I have a great pleasure in inviting Jackie to talk about this book. Jackie’s an incredibly talented bereavement counsellor based in Henley-on-Thames (Twitter, Website, Facebook) and her passion and skills never fail to impress me. She’sContinue reading “Slog’s Dad : A Bereavement Counsellor’s Perspective”
Slog’s Dad : David Almond and Dave McKean
You know, sometimes, how a book catches you? How it sits there very quietly until you notice it and then, just, holds you to it? This is one of those books. I’ve talked about the wonder of David Almond before, and about his skill in capturing the quiet, and yet somehow immense, magic of the everyday.Continue reading “Slog’s Dad : David Almond and Dave McKean”
First Term at L’Etoile : Holly & Kelly Willoughby
First Term at L’ Etoile by Holly & Kelly Willoughby My rating: 2 of 5 stars It will come as no surprise to you that I enjoy a school story. It’s a genre that is ripe and perfect for the reader to embrace, being as it is a reflection of a world experienced by prettyContinue reading “First Term at L’Etoile : Holly & Kelly Willoughby”
Dear Shirley Hughes
Dear Shirley Hughes, You’ve changed worlds. Honestly. I think that’s why I sort of stared at you a bit (sorry) when I got the chance to hear you and your family talk in person about your endeavours. I think I stared because of the realisation (and I get this so often) that you’ve made aContinue reading “Dear Shirley Hughes”
Smile : Raina Telgemeier
Smile by Raina Telgemeier My rating: 5 of 5 stars There is very little about this adorable, funny and heartfelt coming of age comic that I did not love. Inspired by the authors own dental experiences, Raina goes through the most epic of toothly sagas after falling over and losing her two front teeth. WeContinue reading “Smile : Raina Telgemeier”
Sunday catch up
Hello! Here’s some of the news and articles I came across this week from the world of children’s literature. 1. After reading the excellent and poetic Red Ink (which I then added to my books about bereavement reading list), this article in the Guardian had a lot of relevance for me. In it, the authorContinue reading “Sunday catch up”
Red Ink : Julie Mayhew
Red Ink by Julie Mayhew My rating: 5 of 5 stars There’s a strange sort of poetry in sadness. The poetics of grief, if you will. Think about it. When sadness, darkness, pain hits us, it hits hard. We feel it. It’s an almost physical impact, this great black nothing that swings out of nowhereContinue reading “Red Ink : Julie Mayhew”
The Story of My Life : Enid Blyton
The Story Of My Life by Enid Blyton My rating: 5 of 5 stars This book. This strange and terrifying and amazing book. The first thing to say is that it sort of defies rating. The five stars I’ve given it reflect, mainly, the outstanding audacity of it. It is supremely constructed in order toContinue reading “The Story of My Life : Enid Blyton”
Rose Under Fire : Elizabeth Wein
Rose Under Fire by Elizabeth Wein My rating: 5 of 5 stars “And still the sky is beautiful.” (p26) If there’s a phrase that sums this book up for me, and perhaps Code Name Verity too (which I reviewed here) it is this phrase, this poetic and graceful phrase that sings from the page. There’sContinue reading “Rose Under Fire : Elizabeth Wein”
Sunday round up and reflections
Happy Sunday! I hope you’ve managed to have an ice-cream this lovely sunny weekend and have had chance to put your feet up and enjoy things 🙂 Here’s the round up of things that caught my eye this week. 1. Zoe from @playbythebook pointed me in the direction of this excellent and powerful piece: “HowContinue reading “Sunday round up and reflections”
The eyes have it : “Hugless Douglas” by David Melling
Can I talk to you about Hugless Douglas? Firstly, I need to give you a bit of background. This book is not one to read when you are feeling remotely hormonal. I read it, and I sobbed. Hugless Douglas broke me in a very good way. It’s a simple, emotional and beautifully told story. AndContinue reading “The eyes have it : “Hugless Douglas” by David Melling”
Learn to question, learn to love
I read something last night over on headguruteacher which has got me thinking. He talks about the difference between knowledge and skills, and the way they interplay and whether one is useful without the other or if, in fact, it’s a symbiotic relationship. It’s a post well worth wallowing in, and one that I think bearsContinue reading “Learn to question, learn to love”
The Blue Lady : Eleanor Hawken
The Blue Lady by Eleanor Hawken My rating: 5 of 5 stars This book is the best school story I’ve read this year. I tweeted about this book and that feeling still stands. There’s something about The Blue Lady, that dark meshing of The Craft and the close, almost Stepfordian potential that the genre alwaysContinue reading “The Blue Lady : Eleanor Hawken”
Sunday round up and reflections
It’s that time of the week again! Here’s a catch-up of things in the world of children’s literature that you may have missed. Warning, it includes rants, farting and school stories. Well, would you expect anything less of me? 😉 1. Several new school stories have been released this week. They’re middle grade and theContinue reading “Sunday round up and reflections”
The use of paratexts in Egg by Alex T Smith
This is ‘Egg’ by Alex T Smith. It is very very lovely (as is all of his work) but what makes this one shine (and inspired this post) is the use of paratexts in this book. “Paratexts?” I hear you say, “What are these paratexts you talk of?” Take a seat my intrigued friend!
The Fabulous Phartlehorn Affair : ML Peel
Fabulous Phartlehorn Affair by Megan Peel My rating: 3 of 5 stars The Fabulous Phartlehorn Affair is all about musical phartling – which is a bit phantastic. The affair involves a mysterious mountain kingdom, a fantastical musical instrument known as the ‘Phartlehorn’ and the downside to being good with your, um, downside. As Roald DahlContinue reading “The Fabulous Phartlehorn Affair : ML Peel”
Azzi in Between : Sarah Garland
Azzi in Between by Sarah Garland My rating: 4 of 5 stars Azzi In Between first came to my attention following it winning the inaugural Little Rebels Children’s Book Award . This, coupled with the review it got over at Playing By The Book meant that it was one book that was very much onContinue reading “Azzi in Between : Sarah Garland”
Fat, the Chalet School, and a bit of a rant
The other night, I had a dream. I woke up and I had a book idea, formed, whole in my hands. This book was to tell the story of girls in a genre that I love, that of the Girls’ Own Novel. The turn of the century boarding school story. The jolly japes and theContinue reading “Fat, the Chalet School, and a bit of a rant”
Geek Girl : Holly Smale
Geek Girl by Holly Smale My rating: 3 of 5 stars Smale’s debut book, Geek Girl, is the story of Harriet Manners. Harriet isn’t very popular at school, and when she’s spotted by a top model scout, it seems like Harriet has a chance to reinvent herself. On this journey she encounters inappropriately hot boy-models,Continue reading “Geek Girl : Holly Smale”
Sunday round up and reflections
Look, it’s a new series! I’m hoping to do this sort of catch up post as a bit of a weekly thing. There’s a lot of good stuff that flies around the Twittersphere and so this series of round-up posts is designed to catch some of them that you may have missed and stuff thatContinue reading “Sunday round up and reflections”
Superman, heroes and heroines (or: how literature lets us make heroes)
I saw Man Of Steel earlier (don’t worry, no massive plot spoilers.) Suffice to say I didn’t really like Russell Crowe as Jor-El but I adored Henry Cavill as Superman. I felt he really got the farmboy wholehearted goodness of Superman and made it big. Man Of Steel has left me thinking about the nature ofContinue reading “Superman, heroes and heroines (or: how literature lets us make heroes)”
The Girls of St Cyprians : Angela Brazil
The Girls of St. Cyprians by Angela Brazil My rating: 4 of 5 stars I posted last night on Twitter with some degree of hysteria that The Girls of St Cyprians was now available on Project Gutenberg. This, for those of you that haven’t experienced this title, is a Very Good Thing. Angela Brazil isContinue reading “The Girls of St Cyprians : Angela Brazil”
I didn’t finish a book today
It’s rare that I don’t finish books. But today, I have made the decision to step away from a book. It feels sort of wrong, as though I’m cheating on it, and insulting the writers and everybody who’s worked with it, and everybody else who read it. It feels a bit like maybe I readContinue reading “I didn’t finish a book today”
The Snow Bear : Holly Webb
The Snow Bear by Holly Webb My rating: 4 of 5 stars I’ve gone into shock from the weather. The fact that I’ve put the heating on, and had to have an extra blanket, has made me fall back several months. And it has made me seek out books of snow and Winter and ofContinue reading “The Snow Bear : Holly Webb”
The Tentacles of Doom : Andi Watson
The Tentacles of Doom!. Andi Watson by Andi Watson My rating: 4 of 5 stars There’s something sort of relentlessly appealing about Gum Girl and it’s something you sort of have to accept. This collection of three short stories, the second in the series (the first being Catastrophe Calling) are very carefully crafted adventures ofContinue reading “The Tentacles of Doom : Andi Watson”
Dimsie Moves Up : Dorita Fairlie Bruce
Dimsie Moves Up by Dorita Fairlie Bruce My rating: 3 of 5 stars In the world of Girlsown literature, there’s a concept of ‘the big four’. These are authors who formed the cornerstones of this genre: Elsie “Abbey” J Oxenham, Elinor “Chalet” M.Brent-Dyer, and Angela “Let’s use all the speech tags in the world” Brazil.Continue reading “Dimsie Moves Up : Dorita Fairlie Bruce”
Breathless
I’ve been thinking about the rights of the reader recently, and I think I have found another to add to that list. I think I would like the right to be caught, as I was this lunchtime, at the final page turn and feeling your emotions rise at what you’ve just experienced. To look up,Continue reading “Breathless”
Bride leads the Chalet School : Elinor M. Brent-Dyer
Bride Leads the Chalet School by Elinor M. Brent-Dyer My rating: 4 of 5 stars I have a soft spot for Bride Leads the Chalet School because it’s one of those books where Important Things Happen. This is one of the ways that the Chalet School is almost impenetrable should you enter it at theContinue reading “Bride leads the Chalet School : Elinor M. Brent-Dyer”
“Dance like there’s nobody watching” (I love you Lorna Hill)
I’m not quite sure when I fell in love with Lorna Hill. I think it may have been the moment when she threw ponies into the mix. Ponies + dance books = holy grail for the book obsessed individual that I was (am/is). So as part of my contribution towards @playbythebook‘s monthly festival of themedContinue reading ““Dance like there’s nobody watching” (I love you Lorna Hill)”
Reflections
As you may know, I’m a one for taking a moment out every now and then to reflect on things. I think sometimes, especially in this golden age of children’s literature, it’s possible to become lost in the ever wondrous newness of things, and so this post is an attempt to redress that. And alsoContinue reading “Reflections”
Mouse Bird Snake Wolf : David Almond & Dave McKean
Mouse Bird Snake Wolf by David Almond My rating: 5 of 5 stars So I have a little story about how I came to Mouse Bird Snake Wolf. I originally came to it via Netgalley and as I am a huge fan of David Almond, I requested it and got approved. So I downloaded aContinue reading “Mouse Bird Snake Wolf : David Almond & Dave McKean”
Pantomime: Laura Lam
Pantomime by Laura Lam My rating: 4 of 5 stars We’ve come a long way, you and I. You’ve listened to me obsess over the nuances of the Chalet School, the way Clara Vulliamy is so perfect in her picture book construction and the way I get slightly evangelical when somebody tells me that Children’sContinue reading “Pantomime: Laura Lam”
Children’s Literature – why it matters
The thing is, every now and then, in mainstream media, we see mention of children’s books. They’re usually rather intermittent mentions, reminiscent of birds caught on a pocket of hot air. They spiral fleetingly, gorgeously, temptingly, and then they wheel away. Children’s books don’t get covered in mainstream media, not easily, not comfortably. Julia DonaldsonContinue reading “Children’s Literature – why it matters”
A Pattern Of Roses : KM Peyton
A Pattern of Roses by K.M. Peyton My rating: 4 of 5 stars I have a great love for KM Peyton. She’s one of the authors that has defined my attitude towards children’s literature, to what it can and could be and to what it so very often is. And so it was with great,Continue reading “A Pattern Of Roses : KM Peyton”
A literary wander around Oxford
I have just realised I never blogged about my trip up to Oxford last Monday! And I did Literary Things Which I Would Recommend! So, with apologies, here is a belated tribute to one of my new favourite places. We went to the Bodleian Library (which is GLORY) and went to the “Magical Books” exhibition.Continue reading “A literary wander around Oxford”
The Complications Of Being Merely Whelmed
I am going to make a statement. I think we are in a golden age for children’s literature. I genuinely do think that. I think the provocative, brave and brilliant books that are being published right now and over the past few years are wonderful things. I think if you grow up now, you’ve gotContinue reading “The Complications Of Being Merely Whelmed”
A Genius At The Chalet School : Elinor M. Brent-Dyer
A Genius at the Chalet School by Elinor M. Brent-Dyer My rating: 3 of 5 stars It strikes me as curious that I’ve never actually reviewed this until now. Nina Rutherford is very much a fascination of mine and so this is a book that is very much overdue a review. Brent-Dyer once wrote aContinue reading “A Genius At The Chalet School : Elinor M. Brent-Dyer”
The Dictionary of Made-Up Words
The Dictionary of Made-Up Words Excuse the self-promo moment, but I have a poem in this (“Clamberquick”). Moment over 🙂
Follow Me Down : Tanya Byrne
Follow Me Down by Tanya Byrne My rating: 4 of 5 stars So I need to tell you something, and it’s something you may need to sit down for. I like school stories. I really, really do. I know right? It shocked me too. There’s something about the genre (something that I explore more here)Continue reading “Follow Me Down : Tanya Byrne”
Love
Love The sky spins overhead and I think – is this love? For I am fairly sure I have never experienced It. I do not struggle to breathe The world – does not stop. I do not fold – or fall – I do not forget and lose the ability to speak –Continue reading “Love”
The Island : Armin Greder
The Island by Armin Greder My rating: 5 of 5 stars There’s a difficulty sometimes when considering picture books and that difficulty is this: they are inescapable. There’s always a level of semiotic interpretation that occurs with a sign, be that sign a word or an image, but I think that the breadth of interpretationContinue reading “The Island : Armin Greder”
Midwinterblood : Marcus Sedgwick
Midwinterblood by Marcus Sedgwick My rating: 4 of 5 stars The darkly poetic prose that beats at the heart of Midwinterblood is something that took me quite by surprise. I’ve known of Marcus Sedgwick and I’ve known of his work for a fair while now but never quite got down to it. That’s a shame,Continue reading “Midwinterblood : Marcus Sedgwick”
Children’s Literature Studies : (eds) M. O. Grenby & Kimberley Reynolds
Children’s Literature Studies: A Research Handbook by M.O. Grenby My rating: 5 of 5 stars This is the book I’d have wanted before I did my MA in Children’s Literature. That’s not to cast aspersions on my MA (which was, to be brief, one of the best accidents that ever happened to me), but ratherContinue reading “Children’s Literature Studies : (eds) M. O. Grenby & Kimberley Reynolds”
The use of Framing and Composition in Ellen and Penguin : Clara Vulliamy
I’ve spoken before about how much I love Clara Vulliamy’s skill with picture books. She’s got an awareness and respect – and love – for the medium that translates into some very good and very smart books. It was with some excitement when I discovered Ellen and Penguin and the New Baby nestling on theContinue reading “The use of Framing and Composition in Ellen and Penguin : Clara Vulliamy”
Ella’s Big Chance : Shirley Hughes
Ella’s Big Chance: A Jazz-Age Cinderella by Shirley Hughes My rating: 5 of 5 stars There’s a richness to everything Shirley Hughes produces, and it’s this richness which comes to the forefront of Ella’s Big Chance. This, as the front cover, states is ‘a fairy tale retold’. It is a retelling of Cinderella, set inContinue reading “Ella’s Big Chance : Shirley Hughes”
Two Sams at the Chalet School
Two Sams at the Chalet School by Elinor M. Brent-Dyer My rating: 2 of 5 stars Two Sams at the Chalet School is a book of peaks and troughs and near-unbearable coincidence. So the same old thing really. Samantha Van Der Byl and Samaris Davies are two new girls at the Chalet School. Although they’reContinue reading “Two Sams at the Chalet School”
Standing on the Shoulders of Giants
I think about things, probably much more than I should, and sometimes the expressing of things is difficult. That’s life, I suppose, that tongue-knot that comes when you least expect it. But it’s how you deal with it, that’s what matters. It’s how you learn to speak, to write to express yourself even through allContinue reading “Standing on the Shoulders of Giants”
Kite Spirit : Sita Brahmachari
Kite Spirit by Sita Brahmachari My rating: 4 of 5 stars As you may gather from this, I am a fan of Sita Brahamachari. I think Artichoke Hearts and Jasmine Skies are two of the best, most perceptive and impressive books I’ve read for a long time. She is an exciting and brilliant writer. KiteContinue reading “Kite Spirit : Sita Brahmachari”
Confessions of a book nerd – those moments when you know you’ve got issues…
1. When a famous lady writer comes into your library and asks for a new library card. Process new card. When famous lady author says, “How much do I owe you?”, just burble slightly in response and go “OH FOR YOU NOTHING I LOVE YOU BY THE WAY.” And then ignore your boss behind youContinue reading “Confessions of a book nerd – those moments when you know you’ve got issues…”
The Chalet Girls in Camp : Elinor M. Brent-Dyer
The Chalet Girls in Camp by Elinor M. Brent-Dyer My rating: 5 of 5 stars If there was anything that Brent-Dyer was particularly good at, it was shifting tone. She had a skill whereby the farcical could be transferred to the heartbreaking, often within moments on the same page. Whether it was from the RobinContinue reading “The Chalet Girls in Camp : Elinor M. Brent-Dyer”
Textual transformations in children’s literature : adaptations, translations, reconsiderations – (ed) Benjamin Lefebvre
Textual Transformations in Children’s Literature: Adaptations, Translations, Reconsiderations by Benjamin Lefebvre My rating: 3 of 5 stars Textual Transformations is a collection of chapter long essays dealing with diverse aspects of ‘textual transformations’, that is to say a certain form of ‘transforming’ of an original source text to something ‘other’ be that a mashup ofContinue reading “Textual transformations in children’s literature : adaptations, translations, reconsiderations – (ed) Benjamin Lefebvre”
The Weight of Water : Sarah Crossan
The Weight of Water by Sarah Crossan My rating: 4 of 5 stars The Weight of Water is a book written in blank verse and it is a very beautiful thing. When books are written like this, when the words are pared back, right back to the bare minimum of what they are and whatContinue reading “The Weight of Water : Sarah Crossan”
Monument 14 : Emmy Laybourne
Monument 14 by Emmy Laybourne My rating: 3 of 5 stars When the world turns upside down, 14 children find themselves trapped in their local superstore. Things outside are dangerous. Terrifying. Mammoth sized hail, earthquakes and – monsters. Dean, one of the children, decides to keep a diary. This is that diary. The first inContinue reading “Monument 14 : Emmy Laybourne”
Children’s Literature and Bereavement
What I’m doing in this post is doing something that I hold very close to my heart. You may be aware that I have a couple of reading lists that I host on this blog. They cover topics that I’ve got a particular interest in or strength of knowledge or topics that I want toContinue reading “Children’s Literature and Bereavement”
Jo to the Rescue : Elinor M. Brent-Dyer
Jo to the Rescue by Elinor M. Brent-Dyer My rating: 3 of 5 stars An odd one this, one of only a couple in the series set wholly outside of the school context and as such reading as a sort of curious hybrid of impenetrable relationships stuck in a picture postcard setting somewhere totally alien.Continue reading “Jo to the Rescue : Elinor M. Brent-Dyer”
Forever : Judy Blume
Forever by Judy Blume My rating: 4 of 5 stars Have I ever told you about my love of Judy Blume? She, along with my equally beloved Paula Danziger and repeats of Mash on Sky One, form a substantial part of my introduction to Americana. That world of summer camps, of wise-cracks and heartbreak, andContinue reading “Forever : Judy Blume”
Four Children and It : Jacqueline Wilson
Four Children and It by Jacqueline Wilson My rating: 4 of 5 stars E Nesbit was one of those authors who wrote big, thrilling, seditious, moving books that pushed at the boundaries of what defined the genre of children’s literature of her day. And I’d argue, quite happily, that that’s pretty much what Jacqueline WilsonContinue reading “Four Children and It : Jacqueline Wilson”
The day before World Book Night
DYESTAFTSA Towers is busy prepping for World Book Night. Tomorrow I’ll be giving away 20 copies of the seminal Noughts and Crosses by Malorie Blackman. And this is why. Children’s Literature has, I feel , helped to make me who I am. I read a lot as a child. Hungrily, desperately. I worked my wayContinue reading “The day before World Book Night”
Maggot Moon : Sally Gardner
Maggot Moon by Sally Gardner My rating: 3 of 5 stars There’s a difficulty for me in reviewing this, and one that I hope to address through the act of reviewing. I admit that’s a fairly Moebius-esque sentence but I hope that it becomes clearer the further I go on. Gardner’s superb. Her writing hereContinue reading “Maggot Moon : Sally Gardner”
I want my hat back : Jon Klassen
I Want My Hat Back by Jon Klassen My rating: 5 of 5 stars There are moments when I am dazzled by the wonder of picture books. It happened with Martha and the Bunny Brothers by Clara Vulliamy and it has happened here again. Klassen’s masterful story is perfection. And I love it so. ItContinue reading “I want my hat back : Jon Klassen”
Wonder : RJ Palacio
Wonder by R.J. Palacio My rating: 5 of 5 stars I’m known to my friends and family and colleagues as having a bit of an interest in children’s literature (I know, that’s a surprise right?) They come to me for reccomendations for their brownie groups, their kids – and sometimes they come to me andContinue reading “Wonder : RJ Palacio”
I Kill Giants : Joe Kelly & JM Ken Niimura
I Kill Giants by Joe Kelly My rating: 5 of 5 stars It’s hard to precis a book like this without throwing immense spoilers around the room and pointing to said spoilers with neon flashing arrows. As a result of this, I hope you’ll forgive me for delivering a fairly bald synopsis albeit it oneContinue reading “I Kill Giants : Joe Kelly & JM Ken Niimura”
Lavender Leigh at the Chalet School
Lavender Leigh at the Chalet School by Elinor M. Brent-Dyer My rating: 4 of 5 stars I have a soft spot for Lavender Leigh at the Chalet School for some very particular reasons. Published in 1943, during both the real Second World War and the Chalet School wartime books, it’s a tightly domestic book thatContinue reading “Lavender Leigh at the Chalet School”
The Mania
When you’re lost in the story, the worlds mesh, the real and the figurative intertwine and cobweb around you. Yesterday I was in Oxford and I felt stories in every building. In every shape. A landscape written upon our psyche and in our consciousness. Buildings, some holding knowledge since the 1400s, and still holding itContinue reading “The Mania”
Operation Bunny : Sally Gardner
Operation Bunny by Sally Gardner My rating: 4 of 5 stars I came to this following the reccomendation of the excellent Ali of Fantastic Reads. Her review is here and I urge you all to go read it forthwith because it’s a perceptive, warm and precise review of this book. Now that that’s done, here’sContinue reading “Operation Bunny : Sally Gardner”
Rosanna Joins the Wells : Lorna Hill
Rosanna Joins the Wells by Lorna Hill My rating: 3 of 5 stars Oh but this book is pale and wan and feels as though you could hold it up to the light and feel the paper disintegrate in your hands. And it is saddening, saddening, for Lorna Hill shines, even now, even in herContinue reading “Rosanna Joins the Wells : Lorna Hill”
The Crew : Bali Rai
The Crew by Bali Rai My rating: 4 of 5 stars There’s a lot to love about Bali Rai. He writes with a sort of sharp truth that’s bolstered, always, with a lot of heart. He may write about difficult situations but he does so with a great love and belief in his characters. TheContinue reading “The Crew : Bali Rai”
The New Mistress at the Chalet School : Elinor M. Brent-Dyer
The New Mistress at the Chalet School by Elinor M. Brent-Dyer My rating: 5 of 5 stars It’s rare in the later books for a character to so firmly bounce from the page as Kathy Ferrars does. Jack does, almost, and I think Flavia does, sort of, but in the rapid character turn and turnContinue reading “The New Mistress at the Chalet School : Elinor M. Brent-Dyer”
Ballet for Laura : Linda Blake
Ballet for Laura by Linda Blake My rating: 4 of 5 stars Ballet for Laura was a bit of a surprise to me, coming blind as I did to it in a charity shop over the Easter weekend. The front cover has a particularly lovely illustration, coupling a white cat with a bent over dancerContinue reading “Ballet for Laura : Linda Blake”
Troy : Adele Geras
Troy by Adèle Geras My rating: 4 of 5 stars Troy is one of those stories that endures. Regardless of whatever spin on it, be that the intense metrosexuality of Brad Pitt’s Achilles or the beautiful lyricism of Gareth Hinds’ Odyssey, the stories of Odysseus, Hector, Achilles and Priam last and have lasted. It’s maybeContinue reading “Troy : Adele Geras”
My Pets – Pop Up Pictures
Oh GUYS, this BOOK. This book. I have enclosed a gallery below to fully explore the WONDER. It is making me full of capital letters and happiness. Let’s just say I practically leapt over the charity shop floor to pick it up. It’s probably the nearest I’ve ever come to a jeté What we haveContinue reading “My Pets – Pop Up Pictures”
Our Moomin Cake
As has become now traditional, my (lovely and amazing) friends and I have an edible book cake party as our way of entering the Edible Book Competition held over at Playing By The Book. This involves me sending everyone a group email with a badly drawn bitmap image and going “IT’S CAKE CLUB TIME” andContinue reading “Our Moomin Cake”
The one where I reach new levels of nerd-dom
So … ummmm … … ummmmmm… ….I sort of made a Chalet School Edible Book …
Discovering your story
I am very stubborn. (Hi Mum. Don’t laugh). I am very stubborn and quite contrary and distinctly independent. I have a few things I believe in, very very much. One of those things is that books – literacy – libraries – all these things fall under one of our greatest achievements as humanity. We shareContinue reading “Discovering your story”
The boy in the dress : David Walliams
The Boy in the Dress by David Walliams My rating: 4 of 5 stars When David Walliams first moved into writing children’s literature I was, I’ll admit, a frightful snob. I didn’t really ‘get’ his television persona (and, as we all know, what we see on television is an exact truth), and so I stayedContinue reading “The boy in the dress : David Walliams”
The New Normal : The Normalising of Creativity
Recently I’ve been thinking about doing a PhD ( Me! A PhD! Me who didn’t even get her GCSE Maths!), and as part of this I’ve been considering what I’d do it on. There’s a part of me that yearns, genuinely, just to get buried in the books and occasionally pop up and produce aContinue reading “The New Normal : The Normalising of Creativity”
The Chalet School in Exile : Elinor M. Brent-Dyer
The Chalet School in Exile by Elinor M. Brent-Dyer My rating: 5 of 5 stars I’m surprised to realise that I’ve not formally reviewed The Chalet School in Exile. I’ve mentioned it repeatedly across my blog, and made no bones of my admiration for it. So now, it’s time to redress the balance and letContinue reading “The Chalet School in Exile : Elinor M. Brent-Dyer”
The fatness of words
There are words that are people, words that live. Words like plumeaux, fat, mythical, snuggling warm words. Words like dash – where – I – skip a beat – and fall – and slip-slip-slide my way across the paragraphs and jerkily into the new space. I like words. I like their power. Their glower. TheContinue reading “The fatness of words”
The reflective post
So today I attended this, which featured one of my longtime favourites (idols) and one of my newest discoveries who has written one of the most perfect picture books I’ve seen in a long time, and now I am taking time to reflect. Sometimes I am guilty of being too Barthesian in my reviews. IContinue reading “The reflective post”
The Savage : David Almond / Dave McKean
The Savage by David Almond My rating: 5 of 5 stars The wild child phenomenon is something that’s been represented repeatedly in literature, perhaps most notably in the case of The Wild Boy of Aveyron. But it’s never been treated like this. Almond and McKean have produced a strange, enthralling hybrid of a book. It’sContinue reading “The Savage : David Almond / Dave McKean”
Martha and the Bunny Brothers : Clara Vulliamy
I’ve been wanting to do a slightly more in-depth review of a picture book for a while, and when I came across the very gorgeous Martha and the Bunny Brothers by Clara Vulliamy it felt like the perfect opportunity. What I want this post to do is give you a bit of background on how I readContinue reading “Martha and the Bunny Brothers : Clara Vulliamy”
Noughts & Crosses : Malorie Blackman
Noughts & Crosses by Malorie Blackman My rating: 5 of 5 stars I came back to this book as part of my preparation for World Book Night. As part of World Book Night, I will be giving away twenty copies of Noughts & Crosses for free to members of the public. And I can’t wait.Continue reading “Noughts & Crosses : Malorie Blackman”
Alfie gets in first : Shirley Hughes
Alfie Gets in First by Shirley Hughes My rating: 5 of 5 stars We all know and love Alfie right? I do. He’s an iconic character, created by the equally iconic Shirley Hughes, and this is one of my favourite titles starring him and his younger sister Annie Rose. But, before I talk about this,Continue reading “Alfie gets in first : Shirley Hughes”
The Sniper : James Riordan
The Sniper by James Riordan My rating: 3 of 5 stars I first came across James Riordan with his excellent The Cello so I was interested to discover this title whilst browsing the shelves recently. It’s set in Stalingrad in 1942 and, I think, spectacularly misleading in how it’s presented. The cover to me isContinue reading “The Sniper : James Riordan”
The day I met Suzie : Chris Higgins
The Day I Met Suzie by Chris Higgins My rating: 5 of 5 stars Oh man, I loved this and I really loved how it started. I started reading it and it was one of those moments where I was all “Oh” and then “Oh man” and then “OH MAN”. It. Is. Good. Told inContinue reading “The day I met Suzie : Chris Higgins”
Prefects of the Chalet School : Elinor M. Brent-Dyer
Prefects of the Chalet School by Elinor M. Brent-Dyer My rating: 1 of 5 stars There’s a sort of addictive quality to the Chalet School series when you reach this point; an awareness that the best books are many moons behind us and somehow all that’s left is melodrama and farce, but it’s a melodramaContinue reading “Prefects of the Chalet School : Elinor M. Brent-Dyer”
Claude in the Country : Alex T Smith
Claude in the Country. by Alex T. Smith by Alex T Smith My rating: 5 of 5 stars I think the Claude series is rapidly turning into one of my top recommendations, regardless of the context. “You like chocolate? Great, read some Claude.” “The weather *is* nice today isn’t it. Read some Claude.” “You wantContinue reading “Claude in the Country : Alex T Smith”
The Fault In Our Stars : John Green
The Fault in Our Stars by John Green My rating: 5 of 5 stars Meet Hazel. Hazel has cancer. Terminally so, but due to a wonder drug, she’s been given a few more years. And now she’s met Augustus Waters. This is the story of how they live and how they love. I finished this,Continue reading “The Fault In Our Stars : John Green”
Fear
There are not many places in this world that make me afraid, but hospitals do. For reasons. Fear is a curious, tight thing. That panic that burns and grows in your throat, that pressure behind your eyes, that inability to form the words that you know you have to say. The way that it seemsContinue reading “Fear”
Angel & Faith : Daddy Issues – Christos Gage & Rebekah Isaacs w/ Chris Samnee
Angel & Faith: Daddy Issues by Christos Gage My rating: 5 of 5 stars I adore Faith. I could (and do!) write her for days. She’s a gift, an utter gift of a character, and I’m so very much in love with this series. Gage has Faith, he’s got her. Perfectly. Gage’s Faith is aContinue reading “Angel & Faith : Daddy Issues – Christos Gage & Rebekah Isaacs w/ Chris Samnee”
The Chalet School and Richenda : Elinor M. Brent-Dyer
The Chalet School and Richenda by Elinor M. Brent-Dyer My rating: 3 of 5 stars I have a lot of love for this one, even though it’s left me with the following ailment. Whenever I’m introduced to somebody with the surname of “Fry”, I automatically think “Fry. Are you related to Elizabeth Fry, the greatContinue reading “The Chalet School and Richenda : Elinor M. Brent-Dyer”
Undone : Cat Clarke
Undone by Cat Clarke My rating: 5 of 5 stars I first came across Cat Clarke with her very spectacular book Torn. She’s a writer who has a very pure simplicity in her work, able to go straight to the heart of the matter and deliver an almost physical emotional impact when she is there.Continue reading “Undone : Cat Clarke”
Department 19 : Will Hill
Department 19 by Will Hill My rating: 4 of 5 stars Do you know what? I’m reading some dead good books recently. And this is one of them, but perhaps it could be better phrased as an “undead” good book (See what I did there? Wasn’t it wondrous and puntastic? Okay, I’ll stop now). WelcomeContinue reading “Department 19 : Will Hill”
The Chalet School Reunion : Elinor M. Brent-Dyer
The Chalet School Reunion by Elinor M. Brent-Dyer My rating: 4 of 5 stars This one cracks me up, primarily because it’s such a sort of underwhelming exercise. If you’ve got this far in the series, you’re fairly committed to the Chalet School. You get it. You get the whole ‘mountains shifting position’ and theContinue reading “The Chalet School Reunion : Elinor M. Brent-Dyer”
Speechless : Hannah Harrington
Speechless by Hannah Harrington My rating: 4 of 5 stars Troublesome and yet, somehow appealing, Speechless is a book that left me in two camps. Chelsea Knot is a gossip. And then, she spills the wrong secret. People get hurt, badly, and she ends up as a social pariah. She decides to take a vowContinue reading “Speechless : Hannah Harrington”