Emma’s Stormy Summer by Miranda Newboult

Published by Tannbourne.

Emma’s Stormy Summer is a really heart-warming book about a girl and her friends facing hard times throughout the summer holidays.
Emma has a great bond with her three best mates, (Becca, Ruth and Charlie)but suddenly, Becca starts being horrible and bullying people at school!
Only to make things worse, Emma’s Dad loses his job and spends his time sitting doing nothing.  He was given pills that seemed to help but however he skipped taking them and he’s only ignoring Emma and Mum more and more…
Is there anyway Emma can possibly help?
That’s when she realizes her holidays are like a summer storm – Things seem bad at first but then everything will clear!
This is a fun book by author Miranda Newboult, perfect for readers aged 8 and up. It’s her first book and Emma’s Stormy Summer is also a special book because it is the first book to be published by the new publishing group; Tannbourne LTD.

After seeing how great this story was, I’m sure Tannbourne will soon become a really big publishing group!
Thanks to Jazzmine (@jreadsalot), I’ve been kindly introduced to these new publishers… and personally, I think they’re fab!

Georgia

Ember Fury by Cathy Brett

Out now from Headline.

Ember Fury is one of the most action packed books I’ve ever read!

Teenager Ember,(otherwise known as Em) has been in rehab, prison and therapy classes because of her pyromaniac based problem.

But you can’t blame her – all she wants is a normal life!

Her dad’s a rockstar in a popular band called Slap!

Her mum was a famous talented artist before she died, and Ember’s new stepmum is the well known movie maker Charity Lane.

For the summer holidays, Em leaves London and her friends behind to visit L.A, where her dad and stepmum live.

The only problem is that she hates the paparazzi, being an icon and practically everything else about Los Angeles.  What can be done?

The only friend she has is an imaginary one – why is everything going downhill for her?

This is a great book for 11 to young adults and watch out for another book by the amazing Cathy Brett: Scarlett Dedd!

Georgia

Soul Beach by Kate Harrison

Due from Indigo (Orion) 1st September 2011

An email from her murdered sister sets Alice Forster on a chilling path – to solve the mystery of Meggie’s death, and the even greater mystery of her life AFTER death. When a girl receives an email from her murdered sister, a whole new adventure takes place…

Alice Forster’s sister, Meggie, was a teen superstar on a talent programme (Sing for your Supper) up until she was found dead in her college apartment, her hair spread out.

Nobody could answer why she’d been murdered; her boyfriend, friends and neighbours were taken in for questioning but still gave no evidence.

Before Meggie’s funeral, her younger sister Alice received an email from her!

It gave her an invitation to visit the virtual paradise of SOUL BEACH.

After the funeral, Alice logs onto the website and sees a beautiful tropical beach.

After a while, long dead teens appear, including her sister!

Alice finds she can communicate with her sister through a site for teens in limbo, but who really did kill Meggie Forster, and could Alice be next?

This is a really great book: it’s essential for every teenager to read!

Georgia

Midwinterblood by Marcus Sedgwick

Due from Indigo (Orion) 6th October 2011.

What would you sacrifice for someone you’ve loved forever?

Have you ever had the feeling that you’ve lived another life?

In a novel comprising seven short stories each of them influenced by a moon – flower moon, harvest moon, hunter’s moon, blood moon – and travelling from 2073 back in time to the dark of the moon and the days of Viking saga, this is the story of Eric and Merle who have loved and lost one another and who have been searching for each other ever since.  In the different stories the two appear as lovers, mother and son, brother and sister, artist and child as they come close to finding each other before facing the ultimate sacrifice.  Beautifully imagined, intricately and cleverly structured this is a heart-wrenching and breathtaking love story, but it also has the hallmark Sedgwick gothic touch with plenty of blood-spilling, a vampire and a sacrifice.

Here’s what Georgia thought of the book:

At first, I thought there was a mistake in this book – I was in the middle of reading about a reporter who goes to an island called Blessed, then suddenly it switched to a middle ages story!

Eric and Merle, in the first story, recognise each other from six past lives, and the book begins…

It keeps the same characters, Eric and Merle and in each of the seven stories, the two characters are close together; either as husband and wife, father and daughter or they have just met.

As you get further into the book itself, each makes more sense than the last story.

This book has such a unique and special twist, because I have never ever read a book like Midwinterblood! personally. I think that there should be lots more books with the same style as this one… keep on writing, Marcus Sedgwick!

Georgia

Gary Northfield and Derek the Sheep at BecFest.

Following on from the excellent talk and illustrations by Alex Milway (see previous article by Georgia) we dashed into Beckenham and barely managed to finish our Wimpy burgers before it was time to get back to meet Gary Northfield at the library.

Gary has worked on the Horrible Histories magazine and, up until recently, his regular series ‘Derek the Sheep’ graced the pages of my son’s favourite comic, The Beano.

 

 

 

 

Now with Derek the Sheep out as a book, Gary spent some time at the library getting the children very excited about creating and drawing their own comic characters and even allowed them to draw his own character, Derek.

Whilst this was going on, I had a little potter around the library to get out the Mythical 9th Division books (by Alex Milway) for my children to read.

When I returned, I’d missed the best bit!

Gary had asked my son, Sam, what he wanted to be when he grew up -he said he wanted to be an artist – so, Gary drew a cracking picture of Sam with easel and paintbrush.

The pages from the flipchart pad are now signed by Gary Northfield and at home -now to get them framed!

If you get the chance to take your children to an event by Gary Northfield or by Alex Milway, do not let it slip by – the children at the BecFest events left full of ideas – and they haven’t stopped drawing since !

 

Thanks to BecFest, the staff at Beckenham Library and to Gary & Alex.

 

Keith

An Act of Love by Alan Gibbons

Published by Orion Childrens Books

Alan Gibbons is an Award winning author, having won the Blue Peter Award and been shortlisted for both the Carnegie Medal and the Booktrust Teenage Prize – from the evidence I have just read in An Act of Love it’s not hard to see why he is so well respected.

This is the second book he has written to try to explain or deal with the current world climate following the September 11th terrorist attacks in New York and the wars that have taken place since (the first being Caught in the Crossfire) and he has a real skill in being able to show all the emotions and feelings from everyone touched by or involved in the violence.

He clearly chooses to challenge himself as a writer, saying in the introduction;

‘Why do I choose such bleak subjects?  Well, you only enter a dark room if you think you can light the way out.’

The book tells the story of two young friends, Chris and Imran, from their schoolboy years and choosing to call themselves ‘blood brothers’ at the age of seven, and their transition and break-down of the bond between them as a result of what starts to happen in the adult world.   We follow Chris as he joins the army and leaves his hometown to head to Afghanistan and Imran, who stays home and slowly becomes influenced by those around him and looks as though to be heading on a path that will lead him to potentially strike terror within his own country.

But, the book moves quickly, starting with the present day – Chris about to collect a medal for bravery and struggling to do so, due to an injury from the war, and Imran finding out that an explosive device is somewhere nearby.  We then flashback to the boys’ stories as they grow up and apart from each other, all the time leaving the reader wondering and worrying about how the present day scene will end when we get back to it.

It’s a cracking read, walking a dangerous tightrope but managing to stay completely balanced in its reporting of both sides of such a difficult subject matter.

And, let’s face it, most adults struggle to work out what is going on in our world when we turn on the television news, so I think this goes a long way towards explaining some of it to our children.

Highly recommended to children and to those with children too.

Keith

MILWAY MADNESS !

Alex Milway, best selling author, gave a talk at the Beckenham library for BecFest on Saturday the 2nd of July!

Alex Milway is a local, Beckenham/Penge based author who loves to write about adventures involving animals. His first books were the Mousehunter trilogy; starring a young intrepid girl called Emmeline. The plot is all about species of mice like the golden mouse and the elephant mouse. Mousebeard is the name of a villain in the second title, “The Curse of Mousebeard”. The series is very popular and highly recommended for ages 8 to 14.

Just out, are the all new Mythical 9th Division books!

At the moment the first two are in bookshops and a third title is underway! These unique books are all about three yetis called Albrecht, Saar and Timonen.  The yetis work undercover for the British Army and risk their necks to save the world from evil masterminds.  The first book in the series is called ‘Operation Robot Storm’ and following that is the sequel called ‘Terror of the Deep’.  These books by the wonderful Alex Milway are packed choc-a-block with his own illustrations and cartoon strips as well as his writing!  I personally would recommend this series for 7 to 12 year olds.

At the BecFest in Beckenham Library, Alex Milway made a special visit.   He has already given a talk once before at the same library, and with the help of some children, created the Mythical 10th Division.  This time me and some other children created the Mythical 11th Division!

The original idea was to design an army of mythical beasts to fight off evil and defend the planet, but strangely we ended up with an army of evil chocolate!

The experience was absolutely fantastic and all of the members of the library thoroughly enjoyed it.

Thank you Alex Milway, and keep writing more brilliant books!

Georgia

BOOKSURFERS: 1 : TREASURE ISLAND by David Gatward

This is a fantastic idea and, in a way, makes author David Gatward the Jamie Oliver of kids’ fiction, by encouraging them to read more stuff that’s good for them.

A very clever use of modern technology (as the Booksurfers series is only in ebook format) what we have here is the modern day equivalent to what I loved as a kid (the choose your own adventure books) as the reader can choose as and when they want to dip in and out of the new story and into the original text of Robert Louis Stevenson’s Treasure Island.

Ever wondered what it would be like to not just read a book, but actually experience it?

The set-up and premise is fairly straight forward but is sure to appeal to its target audience, particularly those who love books like the Alex Rider novels and similar tales of children having fantastic adventures.

Jake, Harriet, Ryan and Becca find themselves thrown together, their parents stolen away and imprisoned from them and facing a series of tasks ahead.

The sinister Cruella de Vil-alike, Kaufman visits them and tells them their mission, a mission they must undertake for the equally strange Crookshanks.  They are to go into classic books, into the stories themselves, via ‘rips’ that can be created by a gadget called the Nautilus (a reference to 20,000 Leagues under the Sea, of course).  The Nautilus allows its user to ‘travel in the here and now.  It also allows you to move about in the there and never was’.

Once inside the books they are to steal valuable artifacts from within them and bring them back to the outside world.  The first of these is the treasure map from Treasure Island, but there are constant references throughout to other great novels – many of which I’m sure will follow after the second title (also available now) The Wonderful Wizard of Oz.

There is a secondary challenge, however, and that is that the children have to ensure that they do nothing in the book that will have an affect on its ending, can do nothing that may change the path of the story and so, in this first title, they choose to try to replicate a copy of the map to leave behind.

Scattering other book titles along the way is a good move, there’s always a chance that the mention that ‘Dracula’ for someone who’s really into ghost stories is ‘brilliant. All that romance and intrigue…’ will be enough to cause a young reader to give it a go.

However, the brilliance here, is that with every underlined section of text, words of a song or mention of a section of the original text, that the reader can simply click and they are taken straight into the original Treasure Island.  Once there, they can choose to continue to read Treasure Island in full, or read a bit and then duck back out to the booksurfers tale, but there are enough comments made by the characters as to how much they loved the book to ensure that readers will be tempted time and time again to read some or all of the original novel.

Alternatively the reader can simply whizz through the great adventure story of the Booksurfers and they will still get a lot of the flavour and feel of Treasure Island and, when they reach the end, they’ll find that the complete Stevenson novel is there for them to enjoy too.

It’s a very clever idea.  Maybe it could be argued that the concept of characters running amok and creating their own stories outside of the ones written for them and reality crashing into fictional characters has been done before, with books such as the Inkheart series, but this is unique in the way it is executed and is sure to catch the imagination of the generation who rarely want to read anything unless it is on a screen and who would, otherwise, be increasingly unlikely to settle back and enjoy a classic.

So, it’s congrats all round –  a great start to an exciting adventure series and a bold and clever way of encouraging children to read some of the old stuff/good stuff too.

Highly recommended – it’s the first book I will gladly let my children borrow my kindle to read.

Get yourself over to amazon and get downloading Booksurfers now.

Keith

 

The Dangerous Days of Daniel X by James Patterson & Michael Ledwidge

Published by Arrow

This is a brilliant story with lots of twists and turns, suspense and horror.

Age category between 9-14 year old readers, this is a fantastic book to own for boys and girls alike.

Daniel X is a superior alien-hunter feared across the galaxy.

He watched his parents being brutally murdered when he was three and, since then, he is out seeking revenge on the alien: The Prayer.

Daniel X has a list of the most wanted aliens in the universe.

Once he targets Number 6, a great war begins, but can the fourteen year old alien hunter survive it?

My five star rating: 4 out of 5.

Georgia.

THE ENEMY By Charlie Higson

Out now from Puffin Books

The Enemy is all about kids and their strengths because they have to cope with fighting zombies day in day out!

 When a terrible disease strikes everybody over the age of 14, Maxie and Aaron build up a child army in Waitrose.

 Suddenly, a guy in a patchwork jacket comes and tells them to come to Buckingham Palace.  Accepting the offer, the Waitrose gang team up with Blue and his gang from Morrisons and begin an amazing, action packed journey from the town of Holloway to Central London…

This is a must read for people who like things such as Doctor Who and Harry Potter.

My Rating: a ten out of ten for this one because of its everlasting suspense!

Georgia Walters