A very belated Happy New Year to you all. Being back in lockdown again means that this homeschooling malarkey is seriously getting in the way of my reading and reviewing schedule! I had some time to myself last night, though, because the third story in the Dragon in the Library series arrived and I couldn’t…
The Good Bear by Sarah Lean
This is the perfect book to feature on Christmas Eve. Set in Norway in the late 70s, The Good Bear is a beautiful, atmospheric story about connection, blended families and acceptance (see synopsis in photo below). It’s the sort of book that creates a bit of a dilemma: do you take your time reading it…
A Christmas In Time by Sally Nicholls
After reading the first in this great, junior fiction time-slip series a month or so ago, we were keen to catch up with Ruby and Alex’s adventures in this festive story. A Christmas in Time takes us back to the Victorian era, and like the first book, is rich in historical details: fashions, festive activities,…
Tinsel: The Girls Who Invented Christmas by Sibéal Pounder
Here come the girls… (if you’re a person of a certain age in the UK, you’ll now have the old Boots Xmas advert song playing in your head – sorry about that!). Tinsel is a funny, magical and empowering Yuletide adventure for readers aged 8+, which is served with a satisfying side dish of friendship…
The Great Reindeer Disaster by Kate Saunders
Ha! This funny, modern and original festive adventure has had us chuckling this week. Who knew that the North Pole was merely a docking station and that Father Christmas and his gang actually live on planet Yule-1, where it’s Christmas Eve every day? With computer hacking and other nefarious deeds being carried out by the…
The Pear Affair by Judith Eagle
With trips restricted at the moment, I managed to travel vicariously to the streets and underground tunnels of Paris last night, thanks to this fab adventure. Nell Magnificent takes the opportunity to visit France with her (downright horrible) parents to try and track down her old friend and nanny, from whom she hasn’t heard lately.…
The Miracle on Ebenezer Street by Catherine Doyle
I’ve been struggling to get into the festive spirit this year, but this has definitely done the trick. Catherine Doyle’s modern re-telling of A Christmas Carol is magical, humorous, hopeful and warm, and while clearly based on the literary classic, feels fresh and original. An exciting and, at times, poignant, adventure, it has great characterisation,…
A Secret of Birds and Bone by Kiran Millwood Hargrave
I’ve just finished A Secret of Birds & Bone as part of my first readalong with Tandem Collective UK and I absolutely loved it. As you might expect from Kiran Millwood Hargrave, it’s a beautifully-written, atmospheric read, with enough darkness and suspense to create all the right sorts of tingles (see photo above for synopsis).…
The Unintentional Adventures of the Bland Sisters: The Jolly Regina by Kara LaReau
This was a quick and very funny read. Kale and Jaundice Bland, sock-darners of Dullsville, lead a quiet, uneventful existence until they find themselves kidnapped and loaded aboard a pirate ship with an all-female, kick-ass crew. As you might expect from a pirate adventure, there’s swashbuckling (the male pirates of The Testostero clearly don’t stand…
The Missing Barbegazi by H S Norup
The snowy weather in the UK today makes this the perfect book to review – grab your hot chocolate and snuggle under the covers… In the snowy Alps, a young girl called Tessa is on the lookout for barbegazi – mythical avalanche-surfing, alpine creatures – as her late grandfather had told her they had rescued…