My Lockdown Books: Thirty Five
My favourite of the late Mal Peet's superlative novels without any shadow of a doubt is Tamar. The review below has appeared elsewhere but I…
My favourite of the late Mal Peet's superlative novels without any shadow of a doubt is Tamar. The review below has appeared elsewhere but I…
Tally Hamilton is furious to hear she is being sent from London to a horrid, stuffy boarding school in the countryside. But Delderton Hall is…
Maggie McKinley comes from a high-rise flat in one of Glasgow's overspill estates. James Fraser is from a town house in the Georgian New Town…
This is a piece I wrote a couple of years ago. I don't think I can improve upon it. To the Edge of the…
I try very hard not to say that I like a book just because I do but Sally's Family by Gwendoline Courtney falls into that…
Between Two Seas was Marie-Louise Jensen's first book and it's exceptionally good. I had some reservations about the believability of it after my first reading. …
Garth Nix is best known for his fantasy books. Fantasy really isn't my kind of genre. The problem is that Garth Nix is my kind…
I decided to treat myself to a re-read of the Ishmael trilogy by the award-winning Michael Gerard Bauer. Why? Well, I don't really need a…
Helen Dore Boylston is best known for her Sue Barton series which I read as a child and very much enjoyed. It was only years…
In Welcome to Nowhere Elizabeth Laird tells Omar’s story. Omar is a twelve-year-old from a fairly average Syrian family who hates school and has great…