Review: Alex Neptune: Monster Avenger

Written by David Owen
Cover Illustration by George Ermos
Published by Usborne

Alex Neptune:  Monster Avenger is the third maritime adventure for Alex and his friends Zoey and Anil in this action-packed, thrilling and fun series that just gets better with every book … perfect entertainment for readers of 9+.

Something unexpected is happening in Haven Bay … the sea creatures are becoming aggressive and Alex is unable to use his sea magic to connect with them.  Alex is upset when the townspeople accuse him of bringing trouble to their home through his association with the Water Dragon who has sank their boats through unleashing a storm.  Trying to connect with his friend, Alex feels that she is in pain, but could she really be responsible for the disappearance of the fishing crews?  And, if so, what could make the creature who has protected Haven Bay turn against it?

When it is discovered that the animals in the sea have become contaminated with a dangerous parasite, Alex fears that his friend the Water Dragon and her baby may be infected too, and that not only Haven Bay but the whole world may be in terrible danger … can Alex use his sea magic to help his friend, and save the world?

And so begins an exhilarating, fast-paced adventure as Alex, and his family and friends, together with some of their wonderful animal companions, become involved in a race against time to protect the Water Dragon, stop the infestation of parasites and save the ocean creatures.  But, what if the only way to save the Water Dragon is by going inside it … sorry, but that is just yucky!  And also rather genius! 

Oh my goodness!  What an absolute rollercoaster of an adventure!  Be prepared for plenty of danger, unexpected twists and oodles of sea-tastic obstacles including electrifying eels, charging crabs and … yes … zombie fish!  This really is a thrilling mission that kept me turning pages as I was completely caught up in the race to see if the Water Dragon could be saved.

Alex, Anil and Zoey make a wonderful team, each with their own strengths, and always encouraging and supporting each other.  I also really liked Alex’s sister Bridget who brings lots of humour to the story.  I’m so glad that Pinch, Kraken, Loaf and the otters continue to play a part in this brilliant adventure series.  Pinch and Kraken, in particular, are just adorable!

Whilst being an exciting fantasy adventure, this story also conveys a timely environmental message relating to pollution in the ocean and the need for everyone to take responsibility to protect our oceans and its creatures. 

This is an exhilarating, magical and heart-warming adventure brimming with wonderful friendships, humour and eco-awareness, and is a brilliant continuation of a series I’ve absolutely adored.  I cannot wait to join Alex in Zombie Fighter!

Thank you to Usborne for a copy in exchange for my honest opinion.

WWW Wednesday

I’m just about to start reading City of Stolen Magic which is one I’m really looking forward to.

I finished reading Clarity Jones and the Magical Detective Agency which was brilliant fun – review shortly. I’ve just finished the third book in the Alex Neptune series, Alex Neptune Monster Avenger which is a wonderfully action-packed, exciting read. I will post my review shortly. Finally, I finished listening to A Flash of Fireflies which was the most wonderful story and like nothing I’ve read before. I loved the use of fairy tales and the fireflies as a way to explore Hazel’s disorder which is so sensitively handled. A really beautiful, heart-warming story.

I think I’m going to read Willodeen next.

What are you reading? Have you read any of these?

First Lines Fridays

First Lines Fridays is a weekly feature for book lovers hosted by Wandering Words. What if instead of judging a book by its cover, its author or its prestige, we judged it by its opening lines?

  • Pick a book off your shelf (it could be your current read or on your TBR) and open to the first page
  • Copy the first few lines, but don’t give anything else about the book away just yet – you need to hook the reader first
  • Finally… reveal the book!

The Unicorn lived in a lilac wood, and she lived all alone. She was very old, though she did not know it, and she was no longer the careless colour of sea foam, but rather the colour of snow falling on a moonlit night. But her eyes were still clear and unwearied, and she still moved like shadow on the sea.

Any ideas?

Goodreads Synopsis:

She was magical, beautiful beyond belief—and completely alone…

The unicorn had lived since before memory in a forest where death could touch nothing. Maidens who caught a glimpse of her glory were blessed by enchantment they would never forget. But outside her wondrous realm, dark whispers and rumours carried a message she could not ignore: “Unicorns are gone from the world.”

Aided by a bumbling magician and an indomitable spinster, she set out to learn the truth. but she feared even her immortal wisdom meant nothing in a world where a mad king’s curse and terror incarnate lived only to stalk the last unicorn to her doom…

Have you read this? What did you think?

WWW Wednesday

I’ve finally managed to start this, and think it’s going to be a fun – if rather bizarre – read!

I’ve finished reading Mountainfell which I really enjoyed, especially the environmental message as well as the magical creature. I’ve also finished the audiobook of the first Ruby Redfort book which I did enjoy, but not sure if I’ll pick up the rest of the series. I also read The Song That Sings Us which I absolutely loved – definitely a book of the year for me. I’ve posted my review as part of the Blog Tour. I also finished The House Trap which is a spooky read with a brilliant premise which I loved. I have posted my review.

I’m hoping to read City of Stolen Magic next.

What are you reading? Have you read any of these?

Blog Tour Review and Giveaway: The Song that Sings Us

Written by Nicola Davies
Cover Artwork by Jane Matthews
Cover Design by Becka Moor
Internal artwork by Jackie Morris
Published by Firefly Press

The Song That Sings Us is a powerful, visceral and lyrical masterpiece:  an environmental thriller that completely gripped me and took me on a heart-wrenching, but ultimately, hopeful journey. 

Harlon’s home is brutally attacked by those the family have been trying to avoid:  Automators.  She has been raised by her mother to defend her younger siblings, twins Ash and Xeno who are Listeners, having the ability to communicate with animals.  Her fierce, loving mother has told her to find an island lost in the deepest part of the island and as bullets ring out, the children leave their home, chased by the Animators, and fearing that their mother has been killed.

And so begins a heart-pounding, unforgettable and gripping adventure as the siblings become separated from each other, finding themselves on different paths but always with the hope of being reunited.  Xeno is taken first following an avalanche, and faces terrible danger from Doada Sisal, the Head of Intelligence for the Animators as she has a power he wishes to both corrupt and harness.  Harlon and Ash are prepared to put themselves at risk in order to save their sister, but their plan is shattered when Harlon is captured and taken on board an Animator Transporter, and Ash is transported to a tar work station in an icy tundra.  Will they be able to escape their captors?  Can they find each other again, and discover the island that may hold the key to renewal?

The action is relentless, devastating and heartbreaking but also magnificent, awe-inspiring and latent with hope.  Danger, discoveries and threat lead to incredible acts of daring, courage and connection.  The story is told mostly from Harlon, Ash and Doada’s perspectives through a third person viewpoint, weaving together an intriguing and authentic narrative where pace is masterfully controlled, and where revelations, twists and turns lead the reader on an irresistible, tense journey through this epic adventure. 

This is a story with nature at its heart, and I really felt the reverence for the environment throughout as Harlon, Ash and their friends fight against environmental annihilation.  Nature is being usurped by an authority who fear it and who wish to not only destroy animals and plants, but to manipulate and control people, moving them into cities to rely on industry and poisoning their minds against any balance with nature.  There is a chilling cruelty and sense of desperation in Doada’s single-minded desire to destroy not only his, but others’, connection to nature.  Balanced with this sense of loss and hopelessness is nature’s inimitable will to fight back against this human betrayal through the threads of a song that brings humans back to nature:  a song of hope and regeneration.  Thank goodness there are those already on her side, fighting alongside her!

This really is a must-read, unforgettable adventure:  a story for our time, a story to speak to our heart and sing us back to nature. 

#GIVEAWAY : You can also go to my pinned tweet (@marysimms72) to enter a giveaway to win one of three copies of this stunning book which will be sent to the winner by the Publisher.

Thank you so much to Firefly Pressfor inviting me to be part of the Blog Tour, and for providing me with a copy of The Song that Sings Us in exchange for my honest opinion.

Do check out the other stops on the Blog Tour below to read exclusive content from the author:

Blog Tour: The House Trap by Emma Read

Written by Emma Read
Cover Illustration by Coralie Muce
Published by Chicken House Books

The House Trap is a deliciously scary, intriguing mystery that is spine-tinglingly thrilling:  an adventure that kept me utterly enthralled throughout. 

Deliah McDeery is visiting her best friend Claude before his move to Cornwall but, rather than spending time with him, she finds herself alone whilst he plays Escape Room II with his new best friend, Sam.  When Claude’s mum sends them outside to spend some time together, they are joined by his younger sister, Amity. 

Whilst the older children become involved in an argument, Amity wanders off into Badwell Woods (which is strictly off limits due to dangerous sinkholes and missing children) to find wood to build a den.  Once the others realise that she is missing, they go in search of her, and soon find her scarf close to a large, dilapidated, ivy-covered house.  Although Claude senses that something is wrong, when he hears a scream from inside, he nevertheless rushes in followed by Deliah and Sam. 

They find themselves in an opulent entrance hall laid out for a party, a hall with no stairs and locked doors – and there’s an invite to play a game with riddles and puzzles to solve.  When Deliah accidentally finds a way to unlock one of the doors, they find a frightened Amity hiding under a bed.  After she shares that she is hiding from the ghosts of lost children, the group are eager to leave, but the front door is now locked, and they are trapped in the house, caught in a deadly game that they have no choice other than to play …

Oh my goodness!  This is the most incredible story that took me on a heart-racing adventure as the children learn the secrets of the house that has stood still in time since the 1930s, a house that seems to be alive, and intent on stopping them leaving.  I was completely fascinated by the mechanics behind the moving house and the engineer who lost himself to his work coupled with the notion of a curse and a lost daughter.  I really felt the tension, building of fear and the sense of running out of time as the house changed as time seems to have caught up with it.  There are definitely some moments that sent shivers down my spine with the eerie atmosphere, the screams and unexpected twists and turns.  Oh – and the insects – and the dolls!  This is a story where friendships are tested, danger is around every corner and where it is unclear who is friend and who foe.  It’s a brilliantly twisty, creepy mystery, with both poignant and heart-warming moments, that kept me entranced and eagerly turning pages. 

The characters in this story are all brilliantly captured from the more instinctive Claude to clever, logical Deliah with her love for maths and puzzles.   Whilst they had been best friends, they have grown apart when they started secondary school and this had led to both awkwardness and arguments.  Will it take being trapped in a dangerous house to bring them back together?  Sam, Claude’s new best friend, enjoys playing computer games, football and has a bit of a tough-boy exterior, but is there more to him than meets the eye?   Then, there is Amity who is just adorable – impulsive with a heart of gold and an inner strength.  All four children show great courage and determination despite their fear, and learn that teamwork makes them stronger.

This is an unputdownable, exhilarating, spooky adventure that is sure to delight and spook readers of 9+:  will you dare accept your invite to play against the house trap?

Author Information

Emma Read was once a very sensible biologist, and now writes children’s books. Milton the Mighty was her first novel and was shortlisted for the 2017 Bath Children’s Novel Award. She lives in Bath with her young family and many, many notebooks.

Twitter: @emmydee73

Website: https://www.emmareadauthor.com/

Thank you so much to Laura Smythe PR and Chicken House for inviting me to take part in the Blog Tour and for providing me with a copy of the book in exchange for my honest opinion.

Do check out the other stops on the Blog Tour!

June Wrap-Up

10 more teaching days, and I’m crawling to the finish! I am, however, very excited that Vashti Hardy is coming to visit our school tomorrow. Then, there’s just SATs results, production, leavers’ celebration and assembly to complete as well as finishing off topics. I haven’t done an awful lot of reading in June, but I did venture in to London on my own (a first!) for the launch of The Boy Who Made Monsters which was brilliant, not least because I got to meet some wonderful bloggers IRL. I really hope we get to meet up at future events.

Books I’ve read:

I’ve read 9 books in June: 5 physical copies, 2 e-books and 2 audiobooks. None of these are from my Beat the Backlist Challenge so still 30 to go!

Books sent by publishers:

I am grateful to have been sent 14 books by Publishers this month which I think is the most I’ve ever received in a month. I have read and reviewed the first 6 in the image below, and will catch up on the others over the summer holidays. There are a couple which aren’t being released until September so I have a bit more time for them.

NetGalley:

My feedback ratio is at 96%. I requested and have been approved to read two books.

Books bought:

I’ve bought four books this month, but who knows when I’ll get to read them!

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

First Lines Fridays

First Lines Fridays is a weekly feature for book lovers hosted by Wandering Words. What if instead of judging a book by its cover, its author or its prestige, we judged it by its opening lines?

  • Pick a book off your shelf (it could be your current read or on your TBR) and open to the first page
  • Copy the first few lines, but don’t give anything else about the book away just yet – you need to hook the reader first
  • Finally… reveal the book!

Harlon sees the lantern beams slicing up the mountainside towards her home. They’ve come at last, the people called the Automators. The red symbol on their black uniforms is a fist closing round the earth and now it’s closing round her family too: they’ve come to take her brother and her sister, Ash and Xeno. But she and Ma won’t let them.

Any ideas?

I’ve just finished this incredible book which I have no doubt will be a book of the year for me.

Goodreads Synopsis:

When animals talk, it’s time humans listened: Harlon has been raised to protect her younger siblings, twins Ash and Xeno, and their outlawed power of communicating with animals. But when the sinister Automators attack their mountain home they must flee for their lives. Xeno is kidnapped and Harlon and Ash are separated. In a thrilling and dangerous adventure they must all journey alone through the ice fields, forests and oceans of Rumyc to try to rescue each other and fulfil a mysterious promise about a lost island made to their mother.

Review: Calling the Whales

Written by Jasbinder Bilan
Illustrated by Skylar White
Published by Barrington Stoke

Calling the Whales is an uplifting story of courage, friendship and trust that echoes with a powerful message of caring for our coastal environment. 

Tulsi and her best friend Satchen live in the fishing town of East Shawle on the Scottish Coast.  Looking forward to the summer holidays, they are enjoying a night-time race up the Craig, an ancient hill with a replica monument of a whale’s jawbone.  As Tulsi looks out to sea, she senses that something is out of place, so the best friends decide to investigate …

Rowing out to the island, they hear strange noises as they begin their search.  Could the cries be coming from the seabirds, or something else?  When the children discover that a magnificent sea creature needs their help, they are determined to save it, despite the danger they face from an incoming storm … Will they be in time to save the creature, or will they be the ones in need of saving?

I loved this gorgeously told story with its appreciation of the wildness and beauty of nature, with its message of caring for the environment, and with the hope that is given through the children’s courage and determination in protecting the environment from the harm that is being caused.  I also loved the element of spirituality and the bonds of friendship that form.

Tulsi and Satchen clearly care deeply about the environment, and especially the harm that is being done to the seas and the creatures who live there through pollution and commercial fishing.  These young conservationists take part in beach cleans and sponsored events to raise money.  This is a great way for children to become aware of ways in which they can help care for the seas and oceans.  I liked the inclusion of a section at the end of the book which gives readers ideas for ways they can help, including supporting charities like Authors4Oceans and learning more about oceans and marine life.

The black-and-white illustrations are stunning and really evoke the wildness and beauty of the coastal environment; the dangers faced by sea creatures and the need to protect our wonderful world; and, the close friendship between Tulsi and Satchen.

This is an exciting adventure for readers of 9+ with a heartfelt environmental message radiating throughout.

This book is published by Barrington Stoke who publish dyslexia-friendly, super-readable and accessible books for children of all ages.  This one is for ages 9+ with a reading age of 8.

Thank you so much to Barrington Stoke for sending me a copy of this wonderful book to read and review in exchange for my honest opinion.

WWW Wednesday

I’m still reading Mountainfell as my evening read and am really enjoying it, especially Erskin link to the animals including Sorkel -definitely a magical read. I’ve just started listening to Ruby Redfort Look Into my Eyes which has been recommended by a superfan in my class. I think this is one I’m going to enjoy. I have spent a good part of today reading The Song That Sings Us which is the most gripping read. I’m completely invested in this story and can’t wait to see where it takes me. The writing is just brilliant.

I finished listening to Bite Risk which is definitely one of my favourite reads this year. I loved the premise of the story and the unexpected twists that really did take me by surprise, and the ending was just perfect! I also read three short reads over the weekend: Crow and Calling the Whales from Barrington Stoke and Tiny the Secret Adventurer the start of a new and adorable series. I have posted my reviews for Crow and Tiny and will be posting my review of Calling the Whales tomorrow.

I’m aiming to read The House Trap next.

What are you reading? Have you read any of these?