Blog Tour Review: Birdie by J P Rose

Written by J. P. Rose
Cover Illustration by Keith Robinson
Published by Anderson Press

Birdie is a powerful, heartfelt story of friendship, belonging and identity set in the 1950s:  an unforgettable, incredibly affecting story that completely captured me. 

Birdie Bagshaw has grown up in Fitzwilliam’s Children’s Home, a home for mixed race children, on the outskirts of Leeds. She adores its kind-hearted owner, Mrs Dudley so is reluctant to leave when her great-aunt sends for her.  She does not want to leave the familiarity of the home, nor her friends and found family.  Although frightened of starting a new life, Mrs Dudley convinces her to make the train journey to the Yorkshire Dales to live with her great-aunt, Mrs Winterbottom.

When she arrives in Barrington Dale, she has to find her own way to her great-aunt’s cottage where she is given a cold welcome.  Confused by this treatment, she makes her way to school where she is subjected to appalling racism by both pupils and the teacher.  Birdie feels rejected and is made to feel like an outsider by both her great-aunt and most of the villagers she meets.

When Birdie is faced with cruelty from some of the older boys, she runs to escape from them, and finds herself at the local coal mine where she meets the last remaining pit pony …

And so begins a story that broke my heart … and healed it again!  The special bond that forms between Birdie and Mr Duke is just incredible and felt completely believable as their love, loyalty and trust in each other resonates throughout the story.  They give each other strength to keep going in terrible circumstances – and hope that life can get better. 

When Birdie discovers that Mr Duke is in terrible danger, she is determined to rescue him, no matter the risk to herself, but will she be able to save her best friend’s life?

Oh my goodness!  Birdie is just the most incredible, inspirational young girl.  Growing up in a home for mixed race children, she has not experienced, or has been protected from, racist abuse.  My heart ached for her as she comes to realise that the reason she is being treated so horribly by others is because of the colour of her skin.  But Birdie does not let this prejudice affect who she is at heart:  an empathetic, caring girl whose kindness radiates from her.  She is someone who enters people’s lives and changes them for the better, bringing a community together and healing those who have been lost in grief. 

After reading Fablehouse, I had already learned more about the history of ‘Brown Babies’ born to relationships between African-American GIs and white British women during the Second World War, and the racism and stigma which forced many of these mothers to give up their babies in order to be ‘socially acceptable’ members of society.  This story also addresses the impact of the aftermath of the Second World War on families who are grieving for those who did not come home from the war.  And, of course, there is the deployment of pit ponies in the mining communities, the ‘unsung heroes’ of the coal mines, something that I found incredibly poignant and really difficult to fathom as ever being acceptable.  The author’s Historical Note makes for fascinating reading and would form the basis for some wonderful classroom discussions following reading the story.

A tender story of family, connection and remaining true to yourself with the most beautiful friendship between human and animal at its heart.  This is a story I cannot recommend highly enough for readers of 9+, and a definite Book of the Year for me.

Author Information

J.P. Rose was born in Manchester but was raised in Yorkshire after her adoption. Growing up she suffered extreme racism, though she continued to be proud of her diverse and rich Jamaican, Nigerian and Anglo-Irish heritage. She trained as an actress but eventually moved into writing, and she is now the author of numerous novels for adults. She owns several horses, dogs and cats and lives in London with her family.

Instagram: https://instagram.com/jprosewriter
X: https://x.com/jprosewriter

Thank you so much to Kaleidoscopic Tours for inviting me to be part of the Blog Tour, and to Anderson Press for providing me with a copy of Birdie in exchange for my honest opinion.

Do check out the other stops on this week’s Blog Tour below:

Blog Tour: First Term at Fernside by Sheena Wilkinson

First Term at Fernside is a modern-day classic boarding school story that is brimming with warmth, friendship and adventure … an absolutely joyous read!

13-year-old Robin is excited to return to Fernside House Boarding School to join her friends for another year, but she is not so happy that her younger cousin, Linnet, will be joining too – and she’ll be staying with her in Lilac Dorm alongside four other girls.  She is also disappointed to discover that her favourite part of Fernside House, the hockey pitch, has been built over to house a new science lab. 

Meanwhile, Linnet is finding her new school overwhelming, and is hoping for some much-needed support from Robin.  Feeling like she doesn’t belong in this noisy place full of chattering girls, and with loud bells and stifling rules, Linnet is relieved to discover that there is a place neighbouring the school that will offer her escape and solace:   Rowanbank.  An empty house with an overgrown garden and woods – and just perfect for nature-loving Linnet when she needs some peace and quiet.  But she is disheartened to learn that Rowanbank has been sold and is now strictly out of bounds to visit.

But Fernside is a special place where friendships blossom as the other girls help Linnet to adjust to the things she is finding difficult.  A real camaraderie quickly develops between the dorm mates and, when new girl Sadie arrives, she is welcomed by the others.  Sadie has been late starting at Fernside as she is recovering from polio, but she is determined to enjoy boarding school, especially as she imagines it will be just like the boarding school stories she loves …

It is not long before adventure finds the girls as they discover that animals are going missing, and Linnet begins to suspect the identity of the culprit.  And when adorable puppy, Rudy, disappears, she is determined to prove her theory.  Could someone mean harm to the animals which are being taken?  Is Linnet putting her friends in danger in her determination to prove her theory?  And could her secret hideaway hold secrets that will change her life?

This is the most wonderful boarding school story set in the mid-1920s in Northern Ireland.  I loved the vivid description of boarding school life:  the lessons, the meals, the strict Matron, the dorms and common room, the bells and the rules to be followed – and broken.  The impact of the First World War is still being felt by families as they are coping with the loss of loved ones and the trauma experienced by those directly affected by the war.  There is also an emphasis on the changing role of women in society as more avenues open up for opportunities in the field of science.  Animal-lover Fran is setting her ambition on becoming a vet, a career that would not have been possible at the turn of the century.

I really liked both Robin and Linnet and their friends, especially Sadie who does not let the effects of polio impact on her enjoyment of everything boarding school life has to offer.  She’s courageous, gregarious and revels in boarding school life.  Robin is kind-hearted and enjoys boarding school life, especially playing sports, including the newly-introduced netball, and spending time with her friends.  Whilst she doesn’t always understand her cousin Linnet, she is there for her and supports her in settling in to Fernside and they develop a genuine friendship.  Linnet is a wonderful young girl who initially finds boarding school life difficult, but, as the term progresses, and her friendships deepen, she comes to enjoy her time at Fernside.  She is direct, honest and empathetic, willing to break the rules and stand up for others who need help. 

A charming, modern-day classic boarding school story with heart-warming friendships and exciting escapades … perfect for young readers of 9+.

Thank you to The O’Brien Press for inviting me to take part in the Blog Tour and for providing a copy of the book in exchange for my honest opinion.

Please do check out the other stops on the Blog Tour:

Author Guest Post and Review: Happy Hills: Knick Knacks Attacks

Today, I’m delighted to be able to share a fascinating guest post from author and illustrator Sophy Henn on the inspiration behind Happy Hills. I will also be sharing my review of this hilarious graphic novel.

Guest Author Post

Sophy Henn on the inspiration behind Happy Hills

One of my favourite bits of my job is doing Q&A sessions after events. Now, I must confess I rarely get to do them as I am always running out of time BUT when I do I am consistently thrilled by the variety of questions I get, but three pop up rather a lot…

How old are you?

What’s your favourite colour?

And… Where do you get your ideas from?

So, in case you are interested…

1) REALLY old (but huge thanks to the very sweet girl who suggested I was 27!)
2) Rainbow
3) EVERYWHERE.


Ideas for stories really are everywhere, they are happening around us all the time but we must stay vigilant or we will miss them! I like to scribble or doodle my ideas down when they pop up as my memory is appalling and also because more often than not I will get a bit of an idea and either have to let it grow over time in my sketchbook, or match it with something else that has been lingering there.

This was the case with Happy Hills. I have been making comics for many years and used comic strips throughout the Pizazz series but it still felt like a bit of a leap to make an ENTIRE comic book. But it was going over my sketchbooks and seeing all the characters I had dreamt up that gave me the idea to create an ensemble cast of cute but VERY feisty characters that could populate this imaginary land.

With my head full from browsing pages and pages of sketchbooks I sat down and drew pretty much the whole cast, straight away on one page of a sketchbook. And the idea of them looking so cute but having very contrasting traits was making me laugh but it was also resonating!

As a middle aged woman I find myself often pigeon holed in one way or another, but I delight in still having the capacity for great silliness, or maybe getting furious about an injustice or possibly just wanting to sing and dance – despite what the world expects of me! And despite huge leaps and bounds this happens in all areas of society, but I think girls and young women suffer from preconceived ideas of looks /behaviour more than most. So not only did a cast of cute but spirited and silly characters make me laugh it felt like something with worth and meaning.

I wanted to keep the energy high so while I decided to have a narrative thread that ran through the books in recurring strips, I would pepper this with running gags, standalone strips and mini series that run from book to book. In my head it became a sketch show, rather like The Fast Show, with catchphrases, familiar jokes and surprisingly poignant moments. Hopefully.

The core ideas for the strips themselves come from a very disparate selection of sources – memories of my childhood, of my daughter’s childhood, moments I have witnessed and overheard when I am out and about, pop culture references, old comic strips I made years ago, films, TV and occasionally even BOOKS! As I said before the kernels of stories are everywhere, you just have to keep your eyes and ears open – oh and don’t forget to jot them down!

Review

Knick Knacks Attacks is the second madcap, hilarious book in the Happy Hills full-colour graphic novel series. 

I loved the introduction to the residents of Happy Hills which is included at the start of the book – with some great asides by the flowers!  As Ace wakes up and wonders where he is, he is reminded by Captain that he now lives in Happy Hills, but someone else has sight their sights on the zany residents of his new home …

Knick Knacks loves collecting things and this time, he has set his sights on swiping a collection of new Happy Hills friends – whether they like it or not! As the residents of Happy Hills live their own wacky lives with stare-offs and dance-offs, Knick Knacks plots his first friendship swipe …  will the residents realise the danger they are in before it’s too late, or will Happy Hills lose its eccentric residents to a villainous collector?

Wowzers!  Giggles are absolutely guaranteed in this chaotic adventure when the mischievous villain Knick Knacks comes up with his brilliantly inventive schemes for collecting his new friends.  Meanwhile, the wondrously bizarre cast of characters in Happy Hills are oblivious to what is happening as they are caught up in their own laugh-out-loud stories.  And just wait for the flower narrators – genius!

Whilst this is a fantastically funny story, it also has some heart-warming messages about friendships.

The full-colour, vibrant illustrations are absolutely gorgeous and so very expressive with a variety of panel sizes, captions and speech balloons which will appeal to young readers. I loved that there are tutorials to encourage young readers to draw Shroomer and Knick Knacks – maybe they’ll even be tempted to continue the story … before they can get their hands on the next Happy Hills adventure.

A delicious delight that is sure to capture the attention of young readers of 5+ as they head to Happy Hills for another wacky adventure.

Author Information

Sophy Henn is an award-winning picture book author and illustrator with an MA in Illustration from the University of Brighton.  She is the creator of the much-loved Bad Nana fiction series, the Pom Pom series, the Ted board books series and has recently created the non-fiction titles Lifesize and Lifesize Dinosaurs.  Her debut picture book Where Bear? Was nominated for the Kate Greenaway Medal and was shortlisted for the Waterstones Children’s Book Prize.  Sophy was the World Book Day Illustrator in 2015 and 2016.  Her books are published throughout the world.

Thank you to Nic Wilkinson and Simon & Schuster for sending me a copy of Happy Hills: Knick Knacks Attacks in exchange for my honest opinion.

Blog Tour: Black Gables by Eibhlís Carcione

Written by Eibhlís Carcione
Cover design and internal illustrations by Holly Ovenden
Published by Everything With Words

Black Gables is a deliciously dark, spine-tinglingly spooky and gloriously gothic mystery that swirls with danger, frights and secrets … an absolutely riveting read.

Twelve-year-old Rosella Frawley’s mother has lost her memory after an accident so the family have returned to the place where she grew up, Black Gables, in the hope that the familiarity of her childhood home will trigger her memory to return.  But Black Gables is not a place for hope …

Rosella starts the local school, Black Gables, named after its entrance:  the black gables of the workhouse that had once stood there.  She immediately feels the suffocating atmosphere as fingers of thick, greenish fog reach from the lake that edges the school.  There is no laughter as children arrive, and Rosella reluctantly enters the school as a strange assortment of teachers appear, expecting work to be completed in silence.  And then she meets the seriously sinister headmaster, Mr Edge …

And so begins an intriguing, creepy mystery with a lyrical and surreal quality that held me completely enthralled as Rosella tries to make connections with the past and discover the secrets of Black Gables and the lake ghouls.  Could Mr Edge be communicating with these ghouls?  Will Rosella’s determined efforts to seek the truth put her in danger? And, is everyone at the school quite what they appear?

This is an intensely eerie, chilling and dark mystery that sent shivers down my spine and kept me eagerly turning pages – sometimes from behind my fingers!  Black Gables feels like a place both lost and hidden in time, yet waiting for a renewal which creeps ever closer with an inexorable feeling of foreboding as Rosella gets more and more entangled in her search for the truth before time runs out. 

The portrayal of the teachers and students is just incredible!  I absolutely felt the sense of the macabre and the strangeness which emanates from them with their old-fashioned clothing, draconian attitudes, unusual appearances and assortment of creatures.  I loved that rather unsettling feeling with a few of the characters as I didn’t know if Rosella should trust them, but hoped she could.  Mr Edge is a particularly sinister character not least because, whilst everyone adulates him, creepiness oozes from him. 

Rosella is an incredibly sympathetic young girl who is struggling to deal with her mum not recognising her daughter, and hoping desperately that the family’s return to Black Gables will help her mum’s memories return.  She senses something is not quite right with the school and refuses to become another compliant student.  Instead, she is determined to discover the truth that hides in the lake and shows great courage in standing up for herself and others as she pursues her investigation.

The perfect spooky season read … visit Black Gables … if you dare!    

Thank you to Mikka at Everything with Words for inviting me to be part of the Blog Tour, and for providing me with a copy in exchange for my honest opinion.

Do check out the other stops on the Blog Tour:

Picture Book Review: What is a Peachick?

Have you ever wondered what a Peachick is? Could it be related to a chickpea? This is a brilliantly funny and imaginative story which addresses just that question with oodles of humour and a fantastic range of chick creations. Meet a celery chick, a dragon fruit chick and even a runner bean chick. And what if socks and shoes, and even the loo, had chicks? But, will the young reader ever learn the answer to this question?

This is such an appealing adventure for young readers who I have no doubt will have great fun creating their own chicks from everyday, familiar items. I loved the natural curiosity of the young narrator who makes some wonderfully weird associations and makes a leap of imagination from food associations to everyday objects.

The text is playful with lots of questions to pique the interest of young readers. The use of alliteration, repetition and rhyme makes this a memorable, engaging read.

The illustrations are gorgeous and are drawn against mostly bright backgrounds with a vibrant colour palette with repetition of beaks, eyes and feet to make the curious collection of chicks easily recognisable in all their brilliant and weird representations. I particularly loved the celery chicks and the umbrella chicks.

This is a gorgeous hardback picture book for young readers of 3+ who will adore meeting chicks in all their fantastically imaginative creations.

Thank you to The O’Brien Press for sending me a copy in exchange for my honest opinion.

Review: The Relic Hunters – The Clockwork Key

Written by Vashti Hardy
Illustrated by Rebecca Sheerin
Published by Barrington Stoke (an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers)

It’s time to get out the emergency confetti!  The Clockwork Key is the first in a new series, Relic Hunters, where steampunk fantasy, archaeology and STEM combine in an exciting adventure … and it’s absolutely brilliant!   

Siblings Mabel and Will Greystone are excited to be going on their first expedition with their Aunt Lucy, a relic hunter who searches the world for ancient objects.  Once aboard the Steam Flyer train, their aunt wastes no time in sharing a map which she hopes will direct them to Umber, a town famous for the invention of clockwork, but now abandoned and lost to the world.  When the trio are disturbed by devious hunter, Byron Cogsworth, they plot to throw him off the trail …

Travelling by steam train and airship, they eventually arrive in Marvolia before boarding a cog cruiser in search of the lost town.  Will this daring trio find Umber before the dastardly Byron rumbles that he has been tricked?  And could an old clockwork key left behind by the last inhabitant of Umber unlock secrets that could bring danger for the explorers?

This is a brilliantly imaginative, action-packed Indiana-Jones-esque adventure with a wonderful blend of archaeology, fantasy and technology.  I loved the ominous feeling of danger being just around the corner, the incredible discoveries and the revelation of a mystery in need of solving … before it is too late.

As well as being a thrilling adventure, there are also some important messages about rightful ownership of relics, the responsibility that comes from being a relic hunter and about leadership.

I loved the close bond between the Greystone siblings and Aunt Lucy who clearly loves taking them along on her expedition and teaching them about ethical archaeology.  Whilst the children have different personalities, they prove themselves to be the perfect relic-hunters-in-training whilst on the expedition.  Mabel is impulsive, clever, curious and a risk-taker which can get her into, and out of, trouble!  Will is quieter and more wary of adventure, but is a keen photographer who documents what is discovered.  And then there’s Grimm who is sarcastic, grumpy and ‘not’ a lover of cuddles – but utterly adorable! 

The full-and-partial-page illustrations throughout are gorgeous, expressive and capture the heart of this exhilarating adventure perfectly. 

What a fantastic start to this thrilling new adventure series and I have no doubt that young readers will be eagerly anticipating the relic hunters next adventure.

This book is published by the wonderful 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 to Barrington Stoke for sending me a copy of The Clockwork Key in exchange for my honest opinion.

Review: Witchspark

Written by Dominique Valente
Artwork by Eleonora Asparuhova
Published by Usborne

Witchspark is the most magical, heart-warming story sparkling with friendship, hope and humour that completely captured me as I was swept into a fantastical alternative Britain for a spellbinding adventure.

12-year-old Eglantine Bury is abruptly awoken when she is shaken out of bed by none other than her sentient house, Huswyvern, who warns her that her uncle Lichen is visiting, and he is bringing trouble with him – the terrifying Whistlewitch. 

When Eglantine’s father is subjected to illegal magic, Eglantine’s worst fears are realised … she is in danger of losing her home, and her father is taken by the Whistlewitch who has given her an ultimatum:  hand over her home within three months, or lose her father forever.  The only way to defeat the Whistlewitch and save both her home and father is to find her Witchspark and bond with Huswyvern.  But Eglantine has failed her spark test so how can she possibly find her magical spark?

Meanwhile, 14-year-old Princess Victoria feels stifled by her mother’s over-protective determination to keep her safe, not allowing her any freedom within the Royal Palace.  On top of this, she is fighting to control the magical powers which she cannot have as magic is forbidden to royals.  As her magical abilities create havoc within the royal household, she fears that her secret will be revealed … and she will lose her royal status.  Could someone who should have her best interests at heart be determined to usurp power?  And, what would they do if they find out about her Witchspark?

Both girls are in danger, they both need help and they are both desperate enough to seek it from a source banned by the Department of Isle-Spark Regulations who strictly control the use of magic within the Magic Isles.  Can the lessons from Miss Hegotty’s Course for Aspiring (and Ungovernable) Witches help them both on their magical journeys?  Can someone who they only meet through correspondence bring these two girls together to help each other in finding friendship, self-belief and the courage to fully embrace their Witchspark and all it offers to them?

This is THE most magical adventure that swept me into a richly portrayed alternative Victorian Britain, a world where sentient houses, ghosts and mythical creatures care for a young girl who is in danger of losing all that she holds most dear.   I found the magical system absolutely fascinating and loved the idea of an inner magical force and its link to nature and talent.  I also really enjoyed learning about the underpinning politics and power struggles governing the use of magic.  Those from rich families and males are more likely to pass the isle-spark test than those who are females or from poorer backgrounds.  Could there be a reason for the imbalance? And is there someone willing to fight back against this injustice?

I loved that this adventure has such strong female protagonists who stand up for both themselves and others – even when this leads to danger from those in positions of power.  Eglantine is the most wonderful young girl.  She has incredible inner strength and courage, never giving up in her determination to find her magical powers, a resilience and strength she has honed from overcoming difficulties due to her limb difference and in facing prejudice and hatred from her dreadful uncle Lichen.  I adored the friendship she has with both her sentient house, Huswyvern and Arthur, her loyal wyvern dragon butler who are both such fantastic, likeable characters.    I also adored Princess Victoria who, far from enjoying the freedom others might think royalty affords her, feels constricted.  She is fighting an inner battle with her uncontrollable magical abilities, seeking to give up a part of herself, but will she learn to embrace who she truly is and find the freedom she lacks?

After that ending, which brought a huge smile, I can’t wait for these ungovernable young ladies’ next adventure!

The illustrations, including framed chapter heading and full-page illustrations, are stunning and really complement the magical story-telling imbued with both warmth and peril. 

A truly mesmerising, magical adventure which sparks with humour, heart and girl power!  Perfect for young adventurers 9+.

Thank you to Fritha Lindqvist and Usborne for sending me a copy of Witchspark in exchange for my honest opinion.

Monthly Wrap-Up

What a month! I’ve had my first experience of teaching Year 3, having moved from Year 6 and, oh my goodness, I don’t think I’ve ever been so exhausted in a first few weeks of teaching! Moving Year groups was a big adjustment for me, and moving to the Junior School was a big adjustment for my new class. I’m loving getting to know my new class who are the most wonderful group of children. And of course, I’m loving reading to them every day and sharing books with them.

Books I’ve read:

I’ve read 12 books this month which, considering how much I’ve been working and napping in the evening, is ok with me!

NetGalley:

My feedback ratio is at 99%. I haven’t requested any books this month and have two on my shelf to leave feedback for.

Books sent by publishers:

I am grateful to have been sent 21 books by publishers this month which is the most I’ve ever received in a single month.

Books bought:

I’ve bought 3 books this month.

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

October Spooky Reads TBR …

I love spooky children’s books so have decided to make October a month where I read some newly released ones, but also catch up with some that have been waiting patiently on my bookshelves.

I have taken the synopsis from Waterstones website.

Sometimes, secrets don’t stay buried forever. Sometimes, they need to be set free… Twelve-year-old Edie and her younger brother Pip are spending half term at Fortune Farm, high in the Irish mountains, with their grandmother Lolly. They haven’t visited Fortune Farm for YEARS and Edie has been dreading it for MONTHS. They spent all their holidays there when Dad was alive. And Edie doesn’t like thinking about Dad – even the happy memories haunt her too much. When Edie uncovers a clue that could lead her to long-lost Viking treasure, it’s just the adventure she needs to take her mind off Dad. But the adventure soon takes an unnerving and dangerous turn, and Edie discovers that Fortune Farm has more secrets, mysteries and ghosts than she had ever dared to dream. A spine-tingling adventure about the power of memories and the restless spirits that whisper on the wind…

Mallory Vayle would list her interests as being normal, books about ponies and very definitely NOT talking to dead people. But when her parents’ carriage takes a leap off Gibbett Bridge – an accident for which there appears to be no explanation – she is taken in by a strange aunt the family disowned years ago and brought to her new, and very spooky, home. Aunt Lilith, a charlatan psychic, is quick to monetise Mallory’s prodigious skills in talking to dead people and starts to advertise grand seances (ticketed obvs) in her spiritual news sheet. The ghosts of her parents also take up residence in the house but are cruelly snatched away by the shadow of Hellysh Spatzl, the grimmest, wickedest necromancer in all of history. To get them back, Mallory will have to learn how to use the talents she hates and raise the old hag from the dead.

Indigo and Rusty might live in a funeral parlour, but they don’t believe in ghosts. That is, until Indigo drops an old urn, accidentally releasing the Cinderman: a terrifying ash monster, who will smother their town in ashes and turn everyone into zombies, unless they can stop him by sunset. Using their newly awakened Spooksmith skills, Indigo and Rusty set out to enlist the help of other ghosts. But can the Blasted Banshee and Chuckles the Phantom Toddler really help them find the Cinderman’s true name and put him in his grave for good before Ashmageddon strikes?

The village is alive with rumours about the Tall Man and Tom lives in his house. Tom hears a boy in the cellar offering a ‘special’ acorn to a rat, Captain Rat, whom he begs to find the key to his leg-iron. The cellar is empty but Tom knows that the boy is real and he’s convinced that he is trapped in a brutal past and the Tall Man’s prisoner. Each time Tom tries to help the boy, the Tall Man’s ghostly presence intensifies. Who is the boy in the cellar and can they escape Tall Man?

When orphans Ben and Jennet arrive in the seaside town of Whitby to stay with Alice Boston, they have no idea what to expect. A lively 92-year-old, Miss Boston is unlike any other foster mother they’ve known. Ben is gifted with ‘the sight’, which gives him the power to see things invisible to other mortals. He soon encounters the mysterious fisher folk who live under the cliffs and discovers that Alice and her friends are not quite what they seem. But a darkness is stalking the streets of Whitby, bringing with it fear and death. Could it be a ghost from the Abbey? Or a beast from hell? Unless the truth is uncovered, the town and all its inhabitants is doomed.

It is the summer of 1919 when Henrietta Abott (Henry for short) and her family – Mama, Father, Nanny Jane and her baby sister who everyone calls Piglet – move to Hope House. Tragic events have left the family fragile, hoping the new house will bring with it the fresh start they all so desperately need. But Mama is ill and when Henry’s father takes a job abroad the family is left under the care of Doctor Hardy, a man Henry doesn’t trust. As Doctor Hardy exerts more control over the family Henry finds herself drawn-in by the house – its secret stairways, hidden doors, unexplained sounds and shadows in the candle’s guttering flame. Then there is the mysterious firelight that glows in the distant trees beyond the garden, in the close-knit darkness of Nightingale Wood. What Henry finds there will change her whole world forever.

Penelope Tredwell is the feisty thirteen-year-old orphan heiress of the bestselling magazine, The Penny Dreadful. Her masterly tales of the macabre are gripping Victorian Britain, even if no one knows she’s the author. One day, a letter she receives from the governor of the notorious Bedlam madhouse plunges her into an adventure more terrifying than anything she has ever imagined. Why are the patients of Bedlam waking every night at twelve minutes to midnight? What is the meaning of the strange messages they write? Who is the Spider Lady of South Kensington? Penelope is always seeking mysteries to fill the pages of her magazine. But this isn’t any ordinary story, it’s the future. And the future looks deadly…

Tibor is a child of the night, a werwolf, adopted by his guardian, a powerful vampir. He and his friend Roza are on the deadliest of quests, and one that will test their very immortality. And they’re not the only ones hunting for the Midnight Treasure. Battling with bears, wrestling with vampirs and racing against the clock, Tibor and Roza must decide who to trust. And whether they will dare reveal the secrets … of the Midnight Treasure.

Have you read any of these? Do you have any other suggestions of spooky books to add to my TBR?

Review: Maisie vs Antarctica by Jack Jackman

Written by Jack Jackman
Cover artwork by Marco Guadalupi
Published by Nosy Crow

Maisie vs Antarctica is the first in an exhilarating, action-packed new adventure series that took me to the stunning, wild and dangerous Antarctica landscape for an unforgettable, breath-taking father-daughter expedition that held me utterly enthralled.

Eleven-year-old Maisie has something in common with her father:  they are both writers.  But, whilst Maisie writes exciting, fantastically imaginative adventure stories, her father writes informative books such as ‘How to Wrestle Crocodiles’ and ‘How to Build a Zipwire’.  Surely, there must never be a dull moment with a father who writes such thrilling books, but Maisie knows her father has never done any of these things.  Whilst she clearly loves him dearly, Maisie is sure that her Dad’s life is full of boring pursuits, like making origami triangles or jigsaws of a cloudless, blue sky.

It is the start of the Christmas holidays, and her Dad is off to Antarctica to research his next book.  But this time Maisie convinces him to take her with him … on her first real-life adventure.  But she gets more than she bargained for when they get into trouble on their flight and her Dad manages to crash-land their plane.  To make matters worse, she discovers that no-one knows where they are.  They may be lost with little chance of rescue, but maybe, just maybe, her Dad is not as boring as she first thought and has abilities beyond her wildest imagination!  But are these abilities capable of saving them both, or will they lead them into even more danger?

And so begins the most thrilling, fast-paced adventure that kept me eagerly turning pages as Maisie is determined to uncover her Dad’s secret – is he a superhero with supernatural powers?  Could he have the ability to teleport?  How else could he have saved her from a dangerous encounter with a leopard seal?  This is an absolutely gripping read with oodles of action, danger, excitement and humour within the stunning, but perilous, Antarctica landscape.  I loved the short chapters with cliffhanger endings which makes it hard to put down, but, as a teacher, I know will also make it a brilliant class read. 

I absolutely loved the close bond between Maisie and her father, and really enjoyed their shared adventure.  It is clear that Maisie’s Dad would do anything to protect his daughter and keep her safe, but can he keep his determined and curious daughter from discovering his secret?  Maisie is the most wonderful young girl:  highly imaginative, daring and courageous with a brilliant sense of humour and a thirst for adventure.

Prepare to be lost in an icy, breath-taking adventure where family secrets unfold and true heroes are made … a terrifically thrilling adventure for children of 9+.

Thank you to Hannah at Nosy Crow for sending me a copy in exchange for my honest opinion.