Review: Pia’s Pet Club: Puppy Problem written by Serena Patel and illustrated by Emma McCann

Written by Serena Patel
Illustrated by Emma Patel
Published by Usborne Books

Pia’s Pet Club: Puppy Problem is the first in a gorgeous new illustrated chapter book series, and what a delightfully charming, fun read it is!

After only three days, almost-nine-year-old Pia is already bored of the summer holidays which she is spending between her dad’s new flat and her mum’s terraced home after their recent separation. Pia absolutely adores animals and longs for a pet, something which neither of her parents will allow her to have, despite her best efforts at trying to persuade them.

Pia is busy putting up her pet posters in her bedroom in her Dad’s flat when she hears barking from outside … When she looks out and sees a boy from her year, Hari, in the communal garden with an adorable labrador puppy, she quickly goes to meet him. After helping untangle Hari from his puppy’s lead, he introduces her to both Luna, his six-month old puppy, and his older dog, Basset hound Raja. Friendly and chatty, Hari shares that his mum doesn’t like Luna as she is too disruptive and she has told him he has to train her before his Nani arrives for a visit from India. Hari only has four days left – and the training has not been successful! Luna, who is somewhat an expert in pets, offers to help train Luna and Hari readily agrees.

And so begins a fantastically funny, heart-warming adventure as Luna’s training doesn’t quite go to plan as her exuberant energy leads her, and Pia, into trouble. Pancake chaos, paint mayhem and so many more laugh-out-loud situations. Can Pia and Hari work together to train Luna before his Nani arrives or risk losing her? Can Pia help her other friends with training their pets and even form her own Pet Club?

This is an adventure that both young readers who already have pets, and those who want a pet, will adore as they follow an incredibly likeable young girl, Pia, as she forms new friendships and helps her friends with their pet problems. She understands the responsibility of looking after a pet and takes this seriously by preparing herself for pet ownership through reading about how to look after pets and watching shows about looking after them. She is hopeful that she will one day be allowed a pet and, in the meantime, is happy for her friends who have their own pets, helping them train them. I also really liked the focus on reasons as to why people might be more wary around pets which shows how important it is to be a responsible pet owner, and to offer reassurance to those who are more frightened around pets.

The illustrations throughout are just gorgeous and really complement the humour and warmth in this adventure as well as the strong bonds of family and friendship.

Paw-fect for young readers of 7+ who will be eager to become honorary members of Pia’s Pet Club as they follow her animal adventures in this hilarious, heart-warming series.

Thank you to Georgia at Usborne Books for sending me a copy of Pia’s Pet Club: Puppy Problem. It was my decision to read and review, and my review is my honest opinion.

Blog Tour: The Narzat and the Shifting Shadow written by Luke Marchant and illustrated by Rory Walker

Written by  Luke Marchant
Illustrated by Rory Walker
Published by Everything with Words

Welcome to my stop on the Blog Tour for the second hilarious adventure for the Narzat – and this one’s got pirates! Today, I’m sharing a post from the author, Luke Marchant, about his inspiration for including pirates in this new adventure for the Narzat.

What inspired me to write about pirates


Why are pirates so fascinating? Because they Arr!

If you haven’t said that line out loud in a suitably pirate-y voice, please go back and do it again. Go on. I’ll wait for you.

That’s better! You see, pirates are many things—dangerous, naughty, villainous, adventurous and more—but above all… they’re great fun! They are the ultimate rule-breakers, and the moment you see them turn up in a story, you know that there’s going to be trouble afoot. There’s something timeless about a brutal buccaneer.

I’d finished the Narzat and I’d been faced with a bit of a problem. The first book had two dastardly villains, and I needed someone or something that could match them in terms of danger and deviousness. Luckily, an answer passed my eyes that day.

Yes, I know what you’re thinking. What? You mean a pirate walked past you that day? Whatever! Well, in actual fact, hundreds of pirates passed me that day. You see, the Brixham Pirate Fest was happening that very week. Hundreds of pirates (or people dressed as pirates, it’s always hard to tell) were catching the bus, checking their phones or—in the case of one bearded gentleman— doing their hair in the reflection of a shop window. Apart from a range of spectacular costumes, there was something indescribably fun about a huge gaggle of pirates.

I had my answer. Why try to find two more dangerous villains, when I could have a whole crew of them? I’d always loved pirates and their adventures growing up—and the idea started to grow. I set about reading Treasure Island for further inspiration (as an aside, I love the links to Tarzan from the first book, so it was great to visit another classic adventure story for the sequel).

But, with this being the Jumble Jungle Wood, my pirates needed a bit of a twist. The image of a huge and ghostly pirate ship stalking across the tree-tops of the jungle-wood started to emerge, and the Shifting Shadow began to take shape. It was great fun creating the motley crew of Jungle Pirates themselves—some of them are downright fierce and fearsome (such as the mysterious Captain Carver, and the cunning Gloom Badger) and others are utter scoundrels (I doubt you’d want to run into the explosive ba-baboon or a giant tiger-gator on the high seas)! And maybe, just maybe, there’s more to some of them than meets the eye…

Above all, I wanted the jungle-pirates to be a group of baddies that readers (young and old) would remember—the type of villains that inspire laughter and booing alike. There’s something wonderfully fun about a real scoundrel.

And how do you know you are enjoying reading about these pirates? Because you Arr!

Thank you so much to Luke for providing me with this post and for Mikka at Everything with Words for inviting me to be part of the Blog Tour.

Do check out the other stops on the Blog Tour:

Review: Finders of Silverthorn Forest written by Rachel Chivers Khoo and illustrated by Laura Catalán

Written by Rachel Chivers Khoo
Illustrated by Laura Catalán
Published by Walker Books

Finders of Silverthorn Forest is the first book in a new series about a secret world hidden within our own – an endearingly charming, magical adventure that completely enchanted me from start to finish.

Young Max is busy in his grandma’s garden at Pickwick Cottage, digging holes, trying to find something precious: his grandma’s memories box which she buried when she was 10 years old during a solar eclipse. She wants to find the time capsule and open it before the next solar eclipse which is only a few days away, something that now seems impossible as she has sold her cottage to move in with Max and his mum who have come to help her with the move.

Max can see his grandma’s disappointment when he hasn’t found her treasure in the garden so, when she tells him that she might have buried the time capsule under an old oak tree in the woods, and gives him a map to its location, he is determined to investigate …

Next morning, Max heads into the woods and finds the ancient oak tree which has a rope ladder leading into a treehouse. Climbing into the treehouse, he is surprised to find shelves of labelled items, and something he’d lost the day before. He is even more shocked when he hears footsteps approaching and someone climbs into the treehouse, and he meets Tuftorious Snook, a Finder who scavenges lost objects using his whiskers.


We Finders have what we call the Golden Rule: Finders Keepers.

Hoping that he can convince the other Finders to let Max go back to his grandma’s cottage, Tuft tells them that Max is a friend who they can trust not to reveal their secret existence in Silverthorn Forest. But when they discover that Max has broken an important Finder rule, they banish him from the forest and Tuft is tasked with taking him home.

The seeds of friendship have been sown between Max and Tuft over a cup of tea so, when Max asks him to help him find his grandma’s memory box, Tuft agrees to help, a decision that leads them into an adventure filled with danger, discoveries and daring deeds. And, when Max discovers that great danger threatens the existence of Silverthorn Forest, can he find the courage to save Tuft and the other Finders before time runs out?

I absolutely loved this adventure and adored the idea of hidden creatures living a secret life amongst humans, scavenging the things that humans have thrown away or lost and keeping them as treasures with a fantastic re-naming system or re-using them as much-loved items such as chipped teacups and mismatched footwear. I loved the environmental messages within the story about the importance of caring for the environment, re-using and re-purposing items and looking after our ancient woodlands. I hope that this is a story that will encourage young readers to get out into nature and explore its wonders … great treasures might just be waiting for them.

Max and Tuft are the most wonderful, adorable characters who quickly form a bond of friendship and mutual trust. I loved how kind-hearted and curious they are and how willing they are to support each other, including by bending the rules, when others are much more set in their ways.

The full-and-partial-page illustrations, including chapter headings and borders, are stunning and really capture the warmth and charm of this adventure perfectly. And there’s a map – always a perfect addition to a story!

This story is a treasure of a find, which will capture the imagination and hearts of young readers of 7+, as they venture into the forest to discover the most magical adventure.

Thank you to Walker Books for sending me a copy in exchange for my honest opinion.

April Wrap-Up

Well April went quickly! This has been a much better reading month for me as I had most of the Easter holidays to catch up on my reading – and it’s a Bank Holiday weekend again!

Books I’ve read:

I’ve read 18 books this month. My highlights were Shrapnel Boys, Inkbound and Dragonborn (middle-grade books) and The Crimson Moth (adult book).

NetGalley:

I have three books on my Netgalley shelf and, despite temptation, have only requested one book in April. My feedback ratio is at 98%.

Books sent by publishers:

I am grateful to have been sent 12 books by publishers this month.

Books Bought:

I’ve bought 6 books this month:

How has your reading month been? Have you read any of these? Have you any of them on your TBR?

Review: Project Pony

Written by Camilla Chester
Illustrated by Irina Avgustinovich
Published by Firefly Press

Project Pony is a wonderfully heart-warming story of family and friendship, of connections and change, and of the beautiful bond between a young girl and her pony.

Pony-loving Natalie is excited to be going on an Own Your Own Pony week with her mum and best friend Ashlin to celebrate her tenth birthday. Both girls adore ponies and, when they are not riding them, they enjoy their imaginary ponies instead. Ashlin has moved from Ireland and has had to leave her beloved pony behind so the girls are on a mission, Project Pony, to help Ashlin get her own pony whilst also convincing Natalie’s mum to be her accompanying adult when she volunteers at a riding stable.

But Natalie also has another secret mission. She hopes that, during this week, she can convince her mum to not let her boyfriend, Vik, move in with them. Natalie doesn’t like Vik as she is worried that she will lose her mum as she will not spend as much time with her if Vik moves in. And then, there’s her secret, a secret that she really doesn’t want Vik, or best friend Ashlin, to discover. So Mission Mum is born. Can Natalie persuade her mum not only to develop a love of ponies, but also to split up with Vik?

But, when something unexpected happens on the morning of the holiday, Mission Mum seems to have failed before it has begun, but could this open up another opportunity for Natalie, even if it is one that she never wanted?

This is an absolutely wonderful, empathetic story, told with such honesty, dealing both with Natalie’s worry about having a stepdad and her sense of abandonment as best friend, Ashlin, and the girls they share a room with, make her feel excluded from the group as she doesn’t have the same experience of pony-riding as they do. Natalie struggles to accept the possibility of a stepdad in her life and the impact that this will have on her relationship with her mum as well as the changes he will bring to her home. But could finding the courage to accept such a big change in her life bring her more happiness than she expected?

Whilst Natalie is struggling with some difficult times, she has one constant on her holiday: the pony she has been teamed with for the week, Loki. And what an absolutely gorgeous, cheeky delight he is! Natalie feels a real connection to Loki and feels a sense of belonging when she is with him, going to him when she needs comfort.

I really enjoyed the setting of the horse-riding centre which took me back to my teenage years when I used to enjoy pony-riding at my best friend’s parents’ stables. I think both children who already ride ponies, and those who want to, will adore spending time with the wonderful collection of ponies – all with very different personalities!

A touching, empathetic story of family and friendship, perfect for young readers of 9+.

Thank you to Firefly Press for sending me a proof copy. It was my decision to review this book and my review is my honest opinion.