Showing posts with label Middle grade fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Middle grade fiction. Show all posts

Sunday 9 April 2023

THE BOY WHO SAVED A BEAR

 by NIZRANA FAROOK;  

  

Central characters Karadi the bear, and the boy Nuwan sit within the jungle edge canopy. Karadi stand all feet on a tree stump while Nuwan layys hand up to wards Karadi's face. The title sits within a pale yellow setting sun and in a nice metalic green and pale red large font. The sky is a mix of orange red yellow and light blue. Nuwan is in blue knee length shorts and a white top. The foliage depicted around the authors named is in metalic green.
Image copyright ©

 
                                                                                  

An Adventure Book Review by Erin the Literary Cat©, International Book Reviewer.

Hello, and welcome to my weekend Book Review featuring Adventures in Middle-Grade Fiction. This week we have a cracking good read for you. 

So without further ado lets read about . . . .


 
Central characters Karadi the bear, and the boy Nuwan sit within the jungle edge canopy. Karadi stand all feet on a tree stump while Nuwan layys hand up to wards Karadi's face. The title sits within a pale yellow setting sun and in a nice metalic green and pale red large font. The sky is a mix of orange red yellow and light blue. Nuwan is in blue knee length shorts and a white top. The foliage depicted around the authors named is in metalic green.

 
 
 

AUTHOR: NIZRANA FAROOK

 

Cover art by: DAVID DEAN

 

Published by: NOSY CROW


Publication date: Paperback - 6 APRIL 2023

 

Paperback ISBN: 978-183 994 3928


Cover price for Paperback: £6.49

 

Pages: 194

 

Age range: 9 to 12 and upwards


Any dogs or cats? No, but one very delightful bear!


 

SPOILER ALERT


Some as to plot direction and characters. 

 

 

Thank you to... 

 

We are exceedingly grateful to Hannah Prutton and the team at Nosy Crow Publishers for the delight of getting to Read & Review this grand, children's adventure before publication. 


As ever, our views are our own, and we only share reviews of books we have bought, been given as gifts, or, as in this case, received in exchange for an impartial review. 


First and foremost, the books we review are those we like and feel our global readers deserve to know about and that we hope they, their children, friends, and students will enjoy.

 


The plot


Nuwan is aged twelve. He lives with his parents, elder brother Krish, and younger sister, Priya, in a village in the north of Serendip, now called Sri Lanka, many, many decades ago.


The story opens with Nuwan, and his best pals, Sani and Chathura, admiring the elephants lined up outside the great Library of the North. It seems the key to a long-lost treasure, housed in a statue at the royal palace, has been discovered in the library. It is a cause for a grand celebration. The key will be presented to the Queen after a five-day procession from the library. All the time, the key to be held aloft on the elephant's back, on display to the villagers en route.


The three want to get close enough to see the great key but can't. If only Krish were there, as he delivers books from the library to a temple beside the royal palace. He could go in and view the key and tell them all about it.


But Krish is sick at home. Unable to pick up his delivery, the three friends think all is lost. Until that is, Nuwan decides HE will take Krish's place and deliver the books to the temple. That way, he could legitimately enter the library and look at the key on display before it leaves for the palace. It will also mean that Nuwan can prove he can be as trustworthy as his sixteen-year-old brother and help the family rather than be expected to fail at everything he does.


It is a choice that will prove life-threateningly dangerous and also life-affirming. 


When Nuwan convinces the librarian, Mrs Weerasinghe, he can undertake the urgent task instead of his brother. Too busy to argue, he is allowed to collect and deliver the books. And in so doing, he gets to see the key. So now all that's left is to get the books to the temple. Just before he heads home to tell his parents, he notices another book tucked away. Almost lost between two wooden panels. Adding the volume of poetry to his pile, he heads home.


But when he expected to find praise for his initiative, he was told flatly he wasn't allowed on the journey. It was, they said, far too dangerous for a twelve-year-old. Despite his protestations that Krish had done it at twelve, he was too unreliable. Later, when nobody is looking, he takes the books and begins his journey to the temple near the Kings City.


Unbeknown to Nuwan, thieves have stolen the real key and hidden it in a hollowed-out section in that same book of poetry. They replaced it with a replica key now heading to the Queen. 


In a momentary rest from his trek, inquisitive Nuwan found the key in the poetry book. He quickly realised what it was and that he needed to get it to the Queen or be branded the thief himself. For safety, he has hung the key around his neck. 


The head librarian and her husband are quickly revealed to be the thieves when they track down Nuwan as he makes his journey and menacingly demand the key back. In the ensuing set-to with Mrs Weerasinghe, the head librarian, and her husband, Nuhan fleas into a cave. The cave is a place of sanctuary not just for him but also for a bear. And not just any bear; this cave belongs to Karadi, a bear with one white paw and a ferocious reputation. 


Now, I could leave this review here; after all, it is a climactic moment. But what follows is worth telling just to get the story really flying. With a twist in circumstance, good or bad will be for you to find out, the key ends up in Karadi's possession, around her neck! 


The story gathers pace and tension from here on in. Nuwan has some lessons to learn along the way, and life and limb are literally put at risk. Whose I shall not say.

 

Suffice it to add, yet again, Mrs H gasped out loud and had a tear in her eye at various points. I really do think she gets too involved in our reviews 🙂. But it is a good sign that this book hits all the right spots.



So, what did we think?


We loved the preceding adventures, all set in and around Serendip/Sri Lanka. The first was The Girl Who Stole an Elephant, and the second was The Boy Who Met a Whale. The third is The Girl Who Lost a Leopard.

 

The action is quick, and the plots, written with vest and aplomb, weave themselves through the land, jungle and oceans to a grand finale. This new adventure (like the others) touches the heart deep down, naturally and gently. 


A brilliant, neat, tidy story, strong engagement: The ability to draw one in to the place, characters, and action that matters. 


Mrs H says she would have loved to have these growing up, though they are by no means dated. She thinks the extra magic in such stories comes from the sense of the wild, the creatures and the unexpected that flows through and punctuates all Nizrana's stories. It is hard not to think of Kipling when reading this, though without the talking creatures. 


It would be remiss not to say how much we love David Dean's artwork within and for all the covers; it is perfect. I get a real sense of place and time in the image styles and colours. A perfect foil for the stories. 

 

Oh, if you are wondering about the title, well, lets just say for every action there is a consequence and a lesson to be learned.

 


So . . . . 

Crunch time. 

 

Without a doubt, this competent series is one to read, share and enjoy. 

 


Want to buy a copy?


Please set out on a journey to your local independent bookshop to get a copy. There are plenty out there (both bookshops and possibly bears, though hopefully not in the same place). Each shop is just waiting to serve up whatever kind of mystery, fun and adventure you desire. Of course, a bear in tow is not obligatory and will likely raise a few eyebrows. On the plus side, it will probably shorten the queues at the checkout, too!


A little about the author:

Nizran was born and lived in Columbo, the capital of Ceylon, now called Sri Lanka. Having graduated from Bath Spa University with an MA in writing for young people, she currently lives in Hertfordshire, England with her family.

There is a lovely article /interview with Nizrana on the blog MY BOOK CORNER. A link to that site and page can be found HERE.    

Or type https://www.mybookcorner.co.uk/my-journey-to-publication-guest-post-by-nizrana-farook/



Nizrana Farook's web page can be found HERE or type this: https://nizranafarook.com/


NOSY CROW's web page can be found HERE or type this: https://nosycrow.com/


David Dean's
web page can be found HERE or type this: https://www.daviddean.co.uk/

And now, the Sunday Selfie.

We are Joining Janet Blue from the Cat on My Head blog for the weekly parade of selfies from all manner of companion creatures from across the pond and globe.

To go to Janet's blog selfie page, please click this LINK. or type / cut and paste https://thecatonmyhead.com/unlikely-easter-two-fur/

I shall leave you with my selfie! 🙂 🙂 That bunny seems happy enough, me, well, I think I was considering the lunch menu .......

 


 

 

 


Till laters!



ERin

Sunday 2 April 2023

DIGGING FOR VICTORY

 by CATHY FAULKNER;  

                                                                                        

The book cover (small image) shows a 12year old girl with brown hair and two pony tails tied with white ribbons, in yellow dress and white ankle socks. She is standing in a flourishing vegetable patch with back to us. She is holding a spade in her right hand and it rests on her right shoulder. She looks out across a field or moor coloured in greens and browns, with a barbed wire fence. The sky is a rich purple and red. In the sky are aircraft, and smoke and flames seem to rise from a point in the distance.


An Adventure Book Review by Erin the Literary Cat©, International Book Reviewer.


Hello, and welcome to my weekend Book Review featuring Adventures in Middle-Grade Fiction.
 
Whilst there have been plenty of antics going on in Upper Much-Mousing to report on this week, Mrs H has been seriously pre-occupied with serious human adult stuff elsewhere. So, please bear with her on that front.
 
(If your here for a selfie, please scroll on down!)
 
This week we have a brilliant story for you. So without further ado, lets go DIGGING FOR VICTORY . . . .




The book cover (larger version of small image) shows a 12year old girl with brown hair and two pony tails tied with white ribbons, in yellow dress and white ankle socks. She is standing in a flourishing vegetable patch with back to us. She is holding a spade in her right hand and it rests on her right shoulder. She looks out across a field or moor coloured in greens and browns, with a barbed wire fence. The sky is a rich purple and red. In the sky are aircraft, and smoke and flames seem to rise from a point in the distance.
Image Copyright. ©


AUTHOR:  Cathy Faulkner

 

Cover art by:   Harry Goldhawk

 

Published by: Firefly Press


Paperback Publication date: 4 May 2023


Paperback ISBN:   9 781 915 444 110

 

Cover price for Paperback £7.99

 

Pages:  279

 

Age range:  9 - 12


Any companion creatures?  No.


 

 

SPOILER ALERT


Some as to plot direction and characters. 

 

 

Thank you to... 

 

We are exceedingly grateful to the team at Firefly Press Publishers (and NetGalley) for the privilege of getting to Read & Review this much-anticipated book before publication and for allowing us to share examples of the text. 

 

As ever, our views are our own, and we only share reviews of books we like and feel our readers deserve to know about and that we hope they will enjoy. 

 

A little extra info before we start: The book follows diary-like entries rather than numbered chapters and runs from December 1940 to June 1941. And depending on the story's needs, sometimes the entries skip days or weeks. 

 

The plot

 

Our book opens on Wednesday, 3rd December 1940.


12-year-old Bonnie (our protagonist) lives with her mum, dad, and elder brother, Ralph, on a dairy farm in the west of England. Ralph, aged just 19, has been accepted to fly for the RAF. The whole family are very proud. Bonnie, though, also wants to be a hero. Why can't girls and women be heroes too? 


With Ralph away, Bonnie's parents decide to take in, billet, someone from another part of the country. It could be a child or maybe a 'land girl', one of the many women to take the place of the men in the fields. The last thing Bonnie wants is a boy, or heaven forefend, a shirker – a conchie, aka a conscientious objector. Nobody wants one of those.

 

When one Mr Fisher arrives soon after, in RAF uniform, Bonnie is unimpressed. The home's routine is necessarily changed, but Bonnie is to ask no questions and just do what Mr Fishers wants. But all he does in the day is sleep and read by the fire. So why, she wonders, is he billeted at their dairy farm. He isn't to help anywhere else or on the farm, and no aerodrome or squadron is stationed nearby? 

 

These thoughts nag at Bonnie, but life moves on. With an extra mouth to feed and less help on the farm, Bonnie gets conscripted to do her bit for her family and country. She has to help DIG FOR VICTORY.

 

Gardening is not Bonnie's thing. Digging garden trenches just does not seem of worth. She only did a morning of digging and would have readily swapped the spade for a gun. She wants to be a hero. She wants to be like her brother and not like Mr Fisher, who sits and does nothing. 

 

Rumours start to fly around school that 'stay at home' Mr Fisher is a coward or a conchie. Maybe he's a German spy? Worse, they brand quiet Bonnie the same!

 

Whatever the truth of it, the taunts by the other girls and boys soon wear down Bonnie's best pal, Carol. Fed up with herself being taunted for siding with and defending quiet Bonnie, Carol soon caves in to popular childish beliefs, saying that it is possible he's a conchie.


Now with no friends in the village, Bonnie is determined to find out EXACTLY what Mr Fisher gets up to when he goes out in the evening and returns before dawn. She wants to find out what he does, get proof he is playing his part in the war, and then win back her friends.


From here on in, the plot unfolds quickly. There is an alarming discovery, uncertainty, new shoots of life and bad news to shake the family to the ground. Resolve will be stretched, unlikely friendships made, friends lost, and true heroism discovered. 


At the centre of this all will be a 12-year-old girl struggling to make sense of things and a world exploding around about her. The outcome I shall leave for you, dear reader, to discover for yourself. You will NOT be disappointed.




So, what did we think?

 


A beautiful, heartwarming story, so lyrically told and powerful enough to raise a tear and a cheer. 

 

Dealing with the realities of wartime from a home perspective is not easy. 

 

To do it eloquently, factually, and yet maintaining a flavour of the camaraderie of the time, without sounding like propaganda, and also the fear, doubts and misconceptions, is a challenging task. Especially when it is for a middle-grade audience who will have little or no awareness of the times, motivations and struggles.


I really can not praise this tale enough. Yes, there is a good overall vibe to the story. But it is a snapshot of a short period, a lone girl, her family, and multiple conflicting thoughts, understandings and priorities that could happen to one of us. There are home truths aplenty to make the younger reader and their families/ teachers think. War is seldom kind, at least for some, no matter the intention or outcome. I believe this is why Mrs H shed a tear. 


The writing style, the lyrical way in which the story and text quite literally dances, flies and weaves across the page, makes this tale so fluid and thus just that bit extra special. Just have a look at the pages below. The words literally do reach out, call out and float along. . . .





 

We read this over two days and would not have missed it for the world. 

So . . . . 



Crunch time. 


I don't think you will find an abler story out there today than this. It seems only now, 80 years afterwards, that the impact of the war on children has been explored for the child reader. 


A worthy and warming short read that should be on your 'To Buy list'.



Want to buy a copy?

To get a copy, and we hope you do, fly in to your local independent bookshop (muddy wellingtons, trowels and spades may well be frowned upon). There are plenty out there, and each shop is just waiting to serve up whatever kind of mystery, fun and adventure you desire.

 

Cathy Faulkner's web page can be found HERE or type this: https://www.cathyfaulkner.co.uk/

 

Firefly Press's web page can be found HERE or type this: https://fireflypress.co.uk/

 

Harry Goldhawk's web page can be found HERE or type this: https://www.harrygoldhawk.co.uk/

 

And as this is the Sunday Selfie day, we are joining the Selfies Blog Hop hosted by our American blogging pals, Janet Blue from the Cat on My Head Blog. To join in and hop around the globe and see all manner of companions and delights, just CLICK this LINK to head to janet Blue's page. 

 

Click the individual links/images below to visit folk....

I shall leave you with a copy of none other than me (obviously) with my ear to the ground listening out for more good books to review! 🙂 🙂

Erin lies with her ear to a blue carpet and paws outstretched before her in a relaxed manner.
 

Till laters!

ERin

 


Sunday 19 March 2023

COSIMA UNFORTUNATE STEALS A STAR

 by Laura Noakes;  

                                                                                

An Adventure Book Review by Erin the Literary Cat©, International Book Reviewer.

Hello, and welcome to my weekend Book Review featuring Adventures in Middle-Grade Fiction.
 

If you are here for a selfie, please scroll down.

On good news front, Mrs H sent my Middle Grade adventure book to an editor who works for many of the top literary houses. Once it returns, well be sending on to prospective agents that have expressed an interest. 

But enough from us. Lets get on with the show and reveal this weeks special adventure story....

Cover image showing osima walking in front of a glass exhibition palace.
Book cover image ©
 



AUTHOR:  LAURA NOAKES

 

Cover art by:   FLAVIA SORRENTINO

 

Published by: HARPER COLLINS CHILDRENS BOOKS

 

Publication date: PaperbacK: 25TH MAY 2023

 

Paperback ISBN:   978-0-00-857905-0

Cover price for Paperback £7.99

 

Pages: 286

 

Age range: 8 and upwards


No companion creatures, this time!


 

 

SPOILER ALERT


Some as to plot direction and characters.

 

 

Thank you to... 

 

We are exceedingly grateful to Jess at Harper Collins Publishers for the privilege of getting to Read & Review this fantastic inclusive adventure book before publication, so we can give you the review you need.


As ever, our views are our own, and we only share reviews of books we have bought, been given as gifts, or received in exchange for an impartial review. 


First and foremost, the books we review are those we like and feel our global readers deserve to know about and that we hope they, their children, friends, and students will enjoy.

 

 

The plot

 

Let's set the scene for you...

 

It is 1899, and we are in Kensington, London. Our heroine, Cosima, 'Cos' to her friends, is aged 12. She has, since a tiny baby, lived at a dilapidated children's home in Victorian London. There are twenty girls in all, each most special in their own way. But every single one was willingly or unwillingly sent to The Home for Unfortunate Girls. You see, polite Victorians frown on disability. Society does not wish to see the disabled or those they perceive as different, or less than, in whatever form. Better to keep them silent, out of sight and out of mind.

 

Cos was the first at the home, and so is child No.1. She acquired the nickname 'Cosima Unfortunate' because she is rather unfortunate; it soon stuck, and unlike the other girls, she has nobody of her own. Or at least, so she thought. Her disability is that her joints ache and dislocate. This means she can be in agony, sometimes needing a walking stick and other times being wheelchair-bound.

 

The school is run by a brother and sister team called Stains. Ever investing in get-rich-quick schemes that never would, they are always in debt. Needless to say, Cos and her pals bear the brunt of this. The girls' rooms are unheated, and the food isn't more substantial than gruel – three meagre daily portions. As much punishment as to earn a scant amount of keep for the home, the girls have to unpick rope and cables from ships. This is then mixed with tar or grease to make oakum, which is used to go between the planks and make the vessel watertight. 

 

Cos and her best pals Diya, Pearl and Mary do their best to win small victories against the despicable Stains: planning raids on Miss Stains' cake stash for guests or hiding the Stains' things and making life as bad as they can for them. They likely always get punished, as often Cos' plans go wrong, or she goes off-plan, but they are worth it.

 

What each of the friends may have lacked outwardly in the eyes of others, they more than make up for with skills. Mary is a most particular planner; everything to the 'nth degree. Diya has a keen mind for figures and inventing and can devise almost any gadget a young girl could wish for mischief-making from the residue of the Stains' failed purchases and schemes that litter the home. Pearl is the master crafter/artist and can create astounding lifelike copies of things using the oakum.

 

Cos' latest plan involves replica cakes to replace those bought by Miss Stains to give to her well-to-do lady guests, patrons of the crumbling home. All is going well until Cos spots Miss Stains' open ledger. Keen to see if there are any extra details of her origins, Cos goes off plan again. And whilst she discovers she arrived with only a handkerchief, the plan falls apart, and they get caught. But just before the girls do, Cos overhears a conversation between Miss Stains and one Lord Fitzroy. It seems he wants to adopt all twenty of the defective girls. Miss Stains being who she is, demands £500 for them, and they strike a deal. 

 

Needless to say, the girls are not 'defective'. Each may be different, but they are still human. Whatever slimy voice Lord Fitzroy wants the girls for, Cos senses it isn't good. It seems the scientific project he is working on and in which the Stains have invested will change the world. But why does he need the girls?

 

Cos digs out the handkerchief from a box of the girls' personal possessions, its relevance and importance previously unknown to all. Within its now dirty fabric and elaborate, if strange stitching is hidden a clue to Cos' life and parents, Cos is sure of that. But what?

 

Armed with only an aged piece of fabric and a hunch Cos is determined to find out more about her parents. More pressingly, she is determined to stop the girls from being effectively sold to the nefarious Lord Fitzroy. 

 

With the aid of a new-found friend, a young street magician and pickpocket, Cos and the gang come up with the most daring of plans yet. It all centres around a collection of highly precious jewels on display at the Empire Exhibition that is taking place at that very time in London. Treasures pilfered from nations within the empire by none other than Lord Fitzroy himself!

 

What is the girl's plan? What plans does Fitzroy have for 20 shunned-by-society innocent girls? Who or what is the mysterious 'The Institute' whose symbol of a skeletal tree is tattooed on Fitzroy's arm and scares Miss Stains so much? And who is the strange new inky-fingered lady visitor to the school who seems more interested in Lord Fitzroy and the Stains than taking tea and cake!

 

A fabulous adventure ensues, with a race against time, death and almost insurmountable odds. There will, I assure you be upset, fear, tension and bravery aplenty. 

 


So, what did we think?  

 

Undoubtedly a tale of two halves. Touching on the genuine circumstances and behaviours towards those perceived as an affront to polite (and itself morally corrupt) Victorian society, this adventure puts disabled characters firmly at the forefront of a cracking yarn where they deserve to be and each shine.



So . . . .

Crunch time. 

 

Written with such conviction, passion, and a real sense of person and place, I half expected Moriarty and Sherlock to make an appearance! It is packed with everything a Middle Grade should be: action adventure, gadgets, and the mysterious, the good and the bad. It shows the true worth of the human soul and a positive world amidst the bad. Definitely one for all the kids to enjoy and be empowered by.



Want to buy a copy?


To get a copy, please escape down your own homemade ladders, evading ghastly staff and well-to-do, if poorly guided gentry, and head to your local independent gruel and oakhum free bookshop. There are plenty out there, and each shop is just waiting to serve up whatever kind of mystery, fun and adventure you desire.


A little about the author: 

 

Dr Laura Noakes was awarded her doctorate in legal history in 2021. She is a disabled writer and works at the Devil's Porridge Museum in Scotland. A link to this rather fascinating museum can be found by clicking HERE or type this: https://www.devilsporridge.org.uk/

 

Laura's poetry has been published in Scrittura Magazine, and she has published articles in 'Disability in Kidlit' and 'Kettle Mag'.

 

She lives with her mischievous cat, Scout, and her husband, Connor, in beautiful Cumbria, England.

 

LAURA NOAKES' web page can be found HERE or type this: https://www.lauranoakes.com/

 

FLAVIA SORENTINO's web page can be found HERE or type this:  https://flaviasorr.com/

 

HARPER COLLINS UK web page can be found HERE or type this: https://harpercollins.co.uk/

 

And as it's a Sunday, we are joing the Sunday Selfies, Hosted by Janet Blue of the Cat on My Head blog, in America. 


I shall leave you with MY Sunday Selfie 🙂 🙂

Images are all ©

 

Till laters!

ERin