Written by Philip Caveney
An Adventure Book Review by Erin the Literary Cat©, International Book Reviewer.
Hello, and welcome to my latest Book Review featuring this week a Adventure in Middle Grade Fiction.
Without further ado, and with my trusty housekeeper, Mrs H, happy that we have our own published novels to get sucked back into, lets get this review on the road!
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AUTHOR: Philip Caveney. (Website link CLICK HERE.)
Cover illustration by: Images ©Adobe Stock and Shutterstock, 2025
Published by: Fox and Ink Books. (Website link CLICK HERE.)
Publication date Paperback: 6th Nov 2025
Paperback 13 digit ISBN: 978-1916747739
UK Cover price for Paperback: £7.99
Amazon KINDLE price: £3.99
Pages: 276
Age range: 9 - 16+
Internal illustrations?: No
SPOILER ALERT
Yes, some as to plot direction and characters.
Thank you to...
We are exceedingly grateful to Graeme Williams, publicist, and Fox and Ink Books for offering us a chance to Read & Review this story.
As ever, our views are our own, and we only share reviews of books we have bought, received as gifts, or received in exchange for an impartial review.
First and foremost, the books we review are those we select to read, like, and feel our global readers deserve to know about and will enjoy.
The plot
It is late July 2020, the school summer holidays have arrived, and it is the height of the Covid pandemic. 15/16-year-old Philip Gregory, aka Flip, is spending his days out and about on his own, exploring the Kent Marshes near his home. His mother is a nurse practitioner in the A&E of a local hospital, managing the brunt and cruel side of the virus. On his latest walk, he heads up a rise and finds in the valley beyond, and hidden from view, an abandoned Victorian redbrick house behind a wired fence. Dilapidated and boarded up, he finds his way inside. What awaits him is a sort of house stuck in time; cobwebs, mouldy old furniture abound, and rubbish left by other visitors is the only sign of modern-day life.
Then, out of the blue, he sees a young, imperious-looking girl about his age, staring at him from an upper landing. Stranger yet, it seems she was expecting him. She calls him Pip, a name he hasn’t been called since early childhood, and has a task for him to complete. Unwittingly, Flip seems to have been seconded to undertake a task for Miss H. Curious how the girl knew his past name, and despite his protestations to the contrary that he is not ‘Pip’, the girl introduces herself as Estella, and leads a confused Flip, aka Pip to where he is to work. He has been tasked with cataloguing all the items in the house’s large and dusty attic, and to look out in particular for a large book that Miss H has lost.
During the search, which does not go well, Flip finds an old and loaded rifle and blows out an attic window by mistake. Taking this as the ideal reason to flee, he makes his excuses, and heads to the ground floor. Estella is not best pleased and insists that he should return the next day, saying that if he does not, Miss H will have ways to ensure he does.
A surprise awaits Flip that evening as, after a very realistic dream where he is running on the Marshes and comes across a stranger who sounds like his absent dad, he awakes to find Estella in his garden! She is there to ensure he returns the next day, and will confront his mother if Flip does not.
Needless to say, Flip is starting to get worried and overwhelmed by all this, but to keep the peace and not get his mum involved, the next day he returns to the old house, Satis House.
The next day dawns, and Flip heads off to the Marshes, and into what becomes a very exciting adventure. As time progresses, it is obvious to him that he is being drawn into the book, Great Expectations, of which he knows little, and is perceived by other characters as Pip from the novel. Indeed, he seems to become Pip, in clothes and worn appearance. But Flip soon realises he has not replaced Pip, just displaced him. Why this is happening, he doesn't know, but somehow he needs to figure out and quickly to make sure he doesn't get stuck back in Pip's world!
Like all great novels, the fun is in the details and telling as they progress. Which is where and why we must leave this review.
So, what did we think?
Great Expectations may well be known to you – if not read, then viewed on the television. What the author has skilfully done here is create multiple stories. We have a retelling, albeit abbreviated, of the Dickens classic, then the tale of Flip and his mother and estranged father. Finally, we have the resulting tale as the casts of both come together, in good ways and bad, and across the two other tales, creating a mini-classic in its own right.
This new tale will appeal to modern and younger readers, but has enough of Dickens’ classic to provide a delightful read for the older reader too. The sometimes pithy wit was well received in this household, as were Flip and Pip’s confusion and responses to situations they found themselves in . Poor Mr Dickens has a rough time of it as well, and his role added a lovely twist/extra layer and dimension that takes it up a notch.
Picking the pandemic as a present-day timeline was a stroke of genius. While most kids of Flip’s age will not have heard or even thought about Dickens’ story, they will instantly relate to that period when they lost freedom, friendships, and saw loved ones if not die, then become sick or seriously ill. This tale ably hits on how life was for each generation, and links and draws comparisons briefly to the cholera epidemic of Victorian times. It also brings together elements of family life, breakups, and tragedy.
One key reason for this plot working so well for us is that the two stories mirror each other in elements that slowly get revealed as the story progresses. Not wishing to spoil things, but it isn’t just the similarity in names that the protagonist Flip shares, but also the life story of key secondary characters as well. So, if you have read Great Expectations, you should be able to see where this is going and why. Though not necessarily how it all works out. That was a lovely twist right at the end, which, while a largish clue was left early on, we ultimately just didn’t see it coming.
So, crunch time.
A masterstroke of plotting, creating a cross-generational tale that Mr Dickens might well have appreciated, had he got his head around his characters not doing what they were told. Well worth a read for all in this age group and above. And we do hope this gets the publicity and credit it deserves in the classroom and beyond.
And as it's time for the Sunday Selfies, here's something equal full of nature and soft and gentle – me!
Here is yours truly caught in what Mrs H says is my 'contemplative, artist's model pose'.
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I hope you enjoyed that adventure review and our selfie.
Till laters!
ERin




Sounds interesting. We all remember 2020 huh! :-D
ReplyDeleteIt was fun, and I hope a good intro for kids to explore the original later in their school life/adult life.
DeleteERin
Flipped sounds darn good and I sure enjoyed your review!
ReplyDeleteYes, a clever combo of events, real and factual, and literary characters.
DeleteERin
What a fabulous review, ERin. I was an English and comparative literature major, and really enjoy Dickens' writing. I will most definitely be giving this book a read! Hugs to you and Mrs. H (your Mrs. H ... not the one in the book). XO
ReplyDeleteThank you, I hope you enjoy this upper MG read as much as we did. Yes, That other Mrs H would not be happy about hugs or any jollity it seems.
DeleteERin
Oooo, Erin, our human loves that sexy look in your eyes and pose! ;D Hugs!
ReplyDeleteThank you, it was one of my rare official poses for camera, shame about Mrs H's clutter behind me, and she being a housekeeper, too!
DeleteERin
I have read Great Expectations, so of course I must now get this book! Your selfie is beautiful.
ReplyDeleteI have just read the sample and added it to my Amazon list to be ordered today. I have also ordered the book from a few weeks ago, Wyrd Wood*sp. I have also ordered too many other things. It is lucky Ivor doesn't see my credit card!!
I hope you will enjoy this. It has a good sense of humour, caused by the two worlds colliding.
DeleteHopefully you'll enjoy Wryd Wood, maybe pass on to Ivor to enjoy which doubles the fun and halves the cost ;)
Do let us know how you get on.
ERin
That's a lovely selfie, ERin. The book sounds pretty good too - Mummy read Great Expectations in school and it's one of the few Dickens novels She actually likes. It should be interesting to see what this new book makes of the classic tale.
ReplyDeleteIt dips in and out of the original in at times a tongue in cheek way as befits the plot line, but still works very well we feel. Great for the target audience.
DeleteERin
You look as if you were planning a crime ! :)
ReplyDeleteThe cogs were whirring for sure, though I won't admit to anything that may have happened in the pantry 😉.
DeleteERin
Princess ERin...oh cats I am convinced you have a PhD in Posing. What a lovely selfie
ReplyDeleteMOL MOL the book Flipped sounds intriguing
Hugs Cecilia
Does PhD mean a litmus test? Or is it a Lit-MOUSE test ;)
DeleteBest wishes to all
ERin
I LOVE your selfie and that book, wow it sounds deep, complex and absorbing!
ReplyDeleteIt is a clever read, and worthy of a good audience. Hopefully schools will push this.
Deletehave a lovely week in NZ.
ERin
That's an exquisite selfie, Erin!
ReplyDeleteThank you kindly :)
DeleteERin
I'm not sure how I missed this post a couple of days ago except to say, it's been busy here. Anyway, I'm glad I came to check if you had posted, this story sounds excellent as I remember reading Great Expectations in school years ago. Mixing the timelines and characters sounds like a delightful story.
ReplyDeleteI do love your selfie, you look like you are running the universe.
I deliberately did not add it to the hops when published so I could save it till today.
DeleteToday running Upper Much-Mousing, tomorrow is the universe. At least that what the diary says ;)
ERin
Oh, my, that does sound like a wonderful read! And your selfie is drop dead gorgeous, Erin!
ReplyDeleteIt was, and thank you, I did pose well for that one. A good nap works wonders ;)
DeleteERin
It sounds like a very interesting and fun read.
ReplyDeleteThank you, yes, a clever and fun use of events and stories past.
DeleteERin
Beautiful selfie, Erin!
ReplyDeleteThank you kindly.
DeleteERin
I certainly did enjoy it I know last time I was here I was saying something to the effect that my daughter-in-law and I both enjoy young adult novels very much as a get-away from real life. We sit down, read, thoroughly enjoy, trade books and sit down to enjoy again. We read other things...historical fiction is one of our faves..but we love the things written for younger readers.
ReplyDeleteWe do think, Mrs H and I, that more adults should read the middle grade reads 9-12 age group as they are amazingly clever and fun.
DeleteHave a wonderful book reading and swapping week!
ERin
Erin, I just looked up and saw Meezers comment on your selfie. I certainly agree. You look fabulous!!!
ReplyDeleteThank you so, I do try, between naps and writing and reading and more naps. ;)
DeleteERin