Showing posts with label Kentishbookboy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kentishbookboy. Show all posts

Friday, 20 October 2023

Micro Review 16

 

Finding Bear by Hannah Gold. Illustrated by Levi Pinfold (Harper Collins)

I think that it was Kentishbookboy who first recommended Hannah Gold's books to me and while I'm not sure if he has grown out of them now I was very excited to see that April was back and off on another adventure with Bear in Svalbard.

This time April manages to convince her dad to be part of the adventure from the beginning as they return to Bear Island to make sure 'her' bear is safe after reports that a polar bear has been shot and injured.

Even with parental approval the book is full of adventure, peril, excitement and a bear cub... While you have to suspend a little belief for the story to work it is a magical read from start to finish and like the best books gets its message across without being at all didactic.

Pinfold's illustrations make this book even more special and I really hope that Gold's books become modern classics - and not because polar bears have become extinct and this is the only way to find out more about them.


Tuesday, 18 July 2023

Kentish Book Boy returns - part six

 

The Monkey Who Fell from the Future by Ross Welford (Harper Collins)

Synopsis

The year is 2425. Centuries after a catastrophic meteor collision, nature has retaken the earth. In a small town in what was once Englnd, young Ocean Mooney and the monkey-owning Duke Smiff have just dug up a 400-year old table computer.

Meanwhile, in the present day, Thomas Reeve and his genius cousin Kylie create the Time Tablet - a device which they hope will allow them to communicate with the future.

But when the Time Tablet malfunctions live on television, Thomas and Kylie are sucked in to the tear 2425 - and only have 24 hours to return home, and save the future of humanity...

My views on the book

I really enjoyed this book; my favourite part was the prologue - so descriptive and it really paints a picture in my head. I felt the epilogue was kind of funny as it linked back to the middle of the book!

Recommendation

Really recommend this book.
No other words for it.

Another one for me to borrow I feel - KBB has interesting (and great) taste in books!

Wednesday, 12 July 2023

Kentish Book Boy returns - part five

 

The Rescue of Ravenwood by Natasha Farrant (Faber and Faber)

Synopsis

To Bea and Raffy, Ravenwood is home. To Noa, it is a welcome refuge. In its own way, the house rescued them, even with a fallen tree taking up most of the kitchen. But now they're about to lose it and there is nothing they can do...or is there?

We all have choices.

Bea can stow away across Europe on a train.

Raffy can keep climbing the tree.

And Noa can find out who started the fire.


My views on the book

I find it a very powerful and symbolic novel. To me, there is a deep family connection.

Recommendation

I would recommend this book to anyone who likes a good, meaningful book.


Once more KBB manages to pique my curiosity with his book choice/review and I'm hoping I can sneak this one of his book case next time I visit!

Saturday, 22 April 2023

Kentish Book Boy returns - part four

 

SkyWake Invasion by Jamie Russell (Walker Books)

Synopsis:

Casey Henderson – aka CASEY_FLOW – is obsessed with online team shooter SkyWake, which has taken the world by storm. The Ghost Reapers are a high-ranking team, and when Casey’s in the zone, anything seems possible.

Then, at a live SkyWake tournament, things start to get weird. The Red Eye alien “cosplayers” seem to have real guns, a massive spaceship looms overhead… and kids are going missing.

My view on the book:

Personally, I find this book very weird. I don't really know how to put my true view into words.

However, I am intrigued as to what the sequel has to offer.

Recommendation:

Honestly, I am giving it a 3.5/5 because it could be better.

Maybe more action/drama is needed; however, mine's just one opinion among many.


I think that this is one of the lowest starred books that KBB has sent over and while not every book can be a hit I admire his perseverance in getting to the end and then in being just curious enough to want to know what happens next. This is very much my reading style so I love that the traits of a bookworm are a family thing!

When he let me know this was the book he'd picked for the month I was really impressed at how far out of his comfort zone he was happy to go. I could see that the sci-fi aspect would appeal I was more surprised at the appeal of the computer game as I didn't know he was into multiplayer games...

I've added this one to my list as again it isn't my normal type of book but I have to confess that I won't be in a huge rush to reserve a copy from the library.




Friday, 14 April 2023

Kentish Book Boy returns - part three

 

The Lizzie and Belle Mysteries: Drama and Danger by J T Williams, illustrator Simone Douglas (Harper Collins)

Synopsis:

Lizzie Sancho and Dido Belle live very different lives. Lizzie works at her family's buzzing Westminster tea shop, while Belle leads a quieter life at the majestic Kenwood House.

Their worlds collide when disaster strikes at the Theatre Royal, Dury Lane and Lizzie's father's life is put under threat. Why is someone after Ignatius Sancho? And who is the shadowy figure on the theatre balcony?

My View on the Book: 

I was really gripped into this book. The prologue encouraged me to read more, and it has a surprising plot twist as well. A very well written book and I want to read the sequel: Portraits and Poison.

Recommendation

I thoroughly enjoyed this book; I give it 6 out of 5 stars!

More people should read this because it is based on the black rights movement ad that is significant in history, all over the world.


When I saw the Bookily book token subscription at the end of last year I thought that it was a fun idea but I never dreamt just how many book recommendations I'd end up with thanks to the books the Kentishbookboy is choosing. 

I'm seeing him this weekend and hope to borrow this one from him too a book rated as 6 stars out of 5 can't be ignored. Interestingly I also have an adult novel on my TBR pile about Ignatius Sancho so perhaps I should read them back to back to compare...

Thursday, 13 April 2023

Norfolkbookworm took an unexpected hiatus

 

Oops once more I really didn’t mean to leave a gap of almost 2 months between posts on here. Part of this has been because I’ve been reading lots of advance copies of books which means my lips have to be sealed until much closer to publication, part of it has been that I’ve not read a lot of books that I’ve loved, and part of it is pure laziness! Now the Kentishbookboy has supplied two new reviews for me so I really have to start blogging again!

Proper posts about a couple of books coming very soon but for now here’s a few non fiction books that I’ve enjoyed and that I think are worth looking out/reserving from your local library.

All the Beauty in the World by Patrick Bringley

Bringley shares memories of his 10 years as a guard at the New York Metropolitan Museum of Art. He took the job as a stopgap during a traumatic period of his life and stayed 10 years. He talks about the job, the people and the art wonderfully and I am truly impressed at his stamina, I am sure museum floors are made out of harder material than anything else in the world!


 

Letters from New York by Helene Hanff

Alistair Cooke’s Letters from America were always interesting to listen to and gave an insight into how he saw America through the decades, I didn’t know that Hanff had had a similar slot on Women’s Hour. Her monthly essays are very chatty and in general just focus on life in her neighbourhood of New York, but they are simultaneously of her time and timeless and I laughed out loud more than once reading them.


 

Last Sunset in the West by Natalie Sanders

This book came out just at the same time as David Attenborough’s new series Wild Isles and the two tied together brilliantly. This book is about Orcas and in particular the pod found off the west coast of the UK rather than the east coast whales featured on the TV, however it is also about orcas in general and how unique each small population around the world is. I’d love to see an orca in the wild, and even more after reading this book. At times the book feels a little repetitive and at points like separate essays awkwardly linked together but overall the author’s love for the orca shone through and outweighed these minor annoyances.



Friday, 24 February 2023

Kentish Book Boy returns - part 2

 

S.T.E.A.L.T.H Access Denied by Jason Rohan (Nosy Crow)

Synopsis:

IT'S JUST ANOTHER ORDINARY DAY, UNTIL IT ISN'T. The kidnap takes place at 7:57. Arun, Donna and Sam are on the run by 11:43. By 17:23 they're operating MANDROID, the most powerful piece of technology the world doesn't know exists and are being shot at by unknown forces. All because one organisation's good idea is another one's weapon. So now someone has to step up.

My View on the Book:

ABSOLUTELY AWESOME! I really enjoyed this book. My favouite part of this was...well actually I don't have a favourite part; it's all really good!

Recommendations:

1,000,000,000,000% recommend this to anyone who likes action


I think that he liked this one, and I'm not so sure I'll get to borrow it!

Friday, 3 February 2023

Kentish Book Boy returns - part 1

 

The Very Merry Murder Club - edited by Serena Patel and Robin Stevens, illustrated by Harry Woodgate (Harper Collins)

One of the things KentishBookBoy and I used to hugely enjoy were our 'book splurges.' We'd go to a book shop with a generous budget and unlimited time to find a pile of new books. We'd often pull dozens off the shelf and read the blurbs or first pages and then buy loads of them.

Time has gone by and finding time when we're both free has become ever harder but I miss the joy of picking books with him - Book Tokens to the rescue as the new Bookily initiative tops up his book token every month so he can go into the bookshop and just chose whatever takes his fancy. To keep expanding his bookshelf the one rule is that the book has to be by a new to him author.

The books he chose in December (the token was a St Nicholas Day present) and January have been hits and he's kindly shared his reviews with me for the blog, and I'm hoping that next time I see him he'll lend the books to me!

Synopsis

"Cat-napping and crazy heists, suspicious Santas and Scrabble games, frost fairs and fancy dress...join the Very Merry Murder Club and put your  detective skills to the test with these fiendishly fun and festive mysteries."

My view on the book:

I really enjoyed reading this book. Personally, my favourite short story was 'Scrabble and Murder' by Nizrana Farook.* It tells the story of a family who stay at a hotel, play Scrabble and someone getting murdered in the middle of the night. I like it because it takes true courage and bravery to be a detective, especially a child with no experience standing up to a murderer.

Recommendation:

100% recommended. A must read and a good birthday/Christmas present for those who like actions, thriller and crime books.

* As many of the family have been trounced by KBB at Scrabble it doesn't surprise me at all that this was his favourite story.

This post and others from KBB are all independent and neither of us are affiliated to Book Tokens (or Bookily) in any way.

Thursday, 17 November 2022

Micro Reviews 76 and 77

 

The Wild Robot and The Wild Robot Escapes by Peter Brown (Hachette Book Group)

I think that someone made me aware of the first book in this pair at some point last year so I was aware of the book but when Kentishbookboy said that the 2nd book was on his Christmas list I decided it was time to have a proper look at them.

I’m so pleased that I did – these are just wonderfully gentle books that have some huge messages to share with readers, but these are woven into the plot so naturally that it isn’t until you close the book you realise just how profound the books are.

In book one there is a shipwreck and a robot, called Roz, somehow survives and washes up on a remote island where she boots up in to life. She is a complete innocent at first and slowly starts to work out how to survive, despite the harsh conditions and unfriendly animals already living on the island.

There is lots of peril, lots of learning and also lots of happy events as Roz finds her place on the island. The final adventure is incredibly gripping but as this sets up book 2 I’m not going to talk about it and give away the details.

In a gentle and natural way the book is about loneliness, prejudice, fear, finding a home, being different, and how your family doesn’t have to be traditional. The sequel includes these themes too, along with the dangers of unrestricted use of AI, grief, and depression. But again you don’t realise this until after you’ve shut the book and start thinking about it.

I like that the idea that Isaac Asimov’s laws of robotics are obeyed in this story even as we suspend belief in that Roz doesn’t need to top up her charge at any point…

I adored these two books, and the short chapters made them ideal for reading whilst in the queue for rides at Disneyland Paris – huge thanks to Norfolk Libraries ebook offer which meant I could download the 2nd book in France as soon as I’d finished the first one!

Wednesday, 20 April 2022

Micro Review 61


 When the Sky Falls by Phil Earle (Andersen Press)

This one was another recommendation from Kentishbookboy as it was their family read a few weeks ago. I didn't know that much about it beyond that it has been shortlisted for (and won) lots of awards.

I am drawn to books set in WW2 and I was eagerly awaiting my library copy to come in when I got a message from my sister warning me that I'd need tissues by the end and to make sure I had them easily to hand...

I was so grateful for the warning as this book packed a huge punch and while I couldn't see that it could end any other way I was still sniffing gently (full blown sobbing) by the last page.

The book is about a troubled boy being evacuated to a friend of his grandmother's after his father is sent to France to fight. It is a reverse evacuation however as Joseph is sent into a city that is under sustained attack from German air raids. Mrs F is not your standard guardian and is trying to save the last few animals remaining in her family's zoo - including Adonis, the male silverback gorilla. Looking after dangerous animals at a time when they could be released from their cages by bomb damage brings a whole new level of dilemma and thought provoking points for discussion as well as making it an edge of the seat read.

There's so much covered in this book but it all works together and as with all the best books I wanted to know what happened to the characters after the last full stop.

I'm glad I got the warning about the ending of the book - and if books carried warnings then this one would have 5 handkerchiefs on the back cover, but also 2 laughing emojis as there's a lot of dry humour in the book. 

It is being recommended for fans of Michael Morpurgo and I'd agree with this - but it is definitely for the older end of his readership. I've seen that Earle has another book about WW2 coming soon but I think I'll have to recover from this one before reading that!

Tuesday, 29 March 2022

Reading in the time of Covid

 

Well after two years avoiding Covid, being super cautious, working from home, wearing masks and being fully vaccinated our luck finally ran out and we both caught it.

Luckily we weren't too ill but at the very start when I found my concentration shot and my inability to read/remember what I'd read I was taken back to the months after my brain hemorrhage and it wasn't very pleasant at all.

My (fortunately temporary) inability to read doesn't seem to have affected my ability to buy and acquire books and the postman has been a little busy. The good (?) thing is that post Covid I am still really suffering from fatigue so I'm not feeling too guilty about curling up on the sofa after work and just reading.

Also helping to relieve the guilt is knowing that all of the books I've brought are from independent publishers and ordered through independent bookshops!

I have now finished Lesley Parr's When the War Came Home as recommended to me by Kentishbookboy's mum and I though that this was a brilliant read - it was so nice to read a book about the First World War that wasn't just about the fighting but had the focus on what came next for those returning from the front and those who'd held everything together on the home front.

Next up as a recommendation from Kentishbookboy is When The Sky Falls by Phil Earle which has made it on to the short list for lots of book awards, including the 2022 Yoto Carnegie Medal. I have been warned I'll need tissues for this one so perhaps I'll save it until I'm fully recovered!


Tuesday, 8 March 2022

Micro review 55

 

Nisha's War by Dan Smith (Chicken House)

Kentishbookboy and I (plus his mum & nan)  have been talking books again and recommending lots of titles to each other, we've also been loaning books around the family and it does feel wonderful to be able to catch up in person and talk about them.

I have my sister's copy Lesley Parr's When the War Came Home about to reach the top of my TBR pile and the last time I was in Kent with them all KBB lent me his prized (signed) copy of Loki: A Bad God's Guide to Being Good by Louie Stowell. This loan came with conditions however as I had to read it while in Kent and under no circumstances could I bring it back to Norfolk to finish. (It was a fabulously funny book and I did fit it in around other family activities).

The book I added to the mix was Nisha's War by Dan Smith a book set during the Second World War. This one came with a difference however as it was partly set in the Far East theatre of war, during the  invasion of the area by the Japanese at the end of 1941/ start of 1942. While being written from a child's point of view the horrors of this campaign are not soft soaped and it was an emotional read.

The other thing I liked about this book was the inclusion of non white characters - Nisha's dad was white British but had married a local woman while he was working in the Far East. There is a lot of curiosity about Nisha's colour and some racism/colonial ideas expressed towards her Amma but no overt racist behaviour on their arrival back in England - I hope that is how such refugees would have been treated but I have my doubts.

Amma and Nisha make it back to England on an evacuation ship and the story opens with their arrival at Nisha's grandmother's house, which is not very welcoming. Slowly the story unfolds and we learn more about the experiences of the family in Singapore and why the family house is so rule bound and forbidding.

There is also a ghost story/mystery element to the book which marries the plot together nicely, without being too off the wall. It is a book about hope, friendship, and reconciling yourself with the past - whilst definitely being a children's book. 

It is hard to discuss the book without any spoilers and I think coming to it knowing just the barebones is ideal. I saw it being mentioned on Twitter to coincide with the 80th anniversary of the Fall of Singapore and I was drawn to it because of the unusual wartime setting - the war in the Far East is so often overlooked that anything using this as a plot is going to appeal to me.

Thursday, 30 September 2021

Book sharing as a family

 

Swarm Rising by Tim Peake & Steve Cole (Hodder Children's Books)

Advance reading copy

This book is a real family affair (not least because as you might have guess from reading this blog we're all into space travel!)

Kentishbookboy's grandad won an advance copy of this in a BookTokens competition and instantly handed it over to a grateful Kentishbookboy (and his mum!).

On a recent visit to see the family KBB very kindly lent me the book, with the proviso that I had to read it and give it back to him that same weekend as he was still only half way through! I now have to apologies to the rest of the family for basically ignoring them while I kept my promise!

In all honesty it wasn't a hardship to read this all in one go - I found it a compelling, exciting page turner and even if I hadn't been on a deadline I'd have read it just as fast.

Peake has set this just a few years into the future so that the tech isn't too far off what we have now but is just a little more advanced. There are more driverless cars and drones than in 2021 but we're still texting, playing computer games and getting takeaway pizza!

As an adult reading this book I could see where a lot of the plot was going, but that is just because of life/reading experience. There were still surprises and twists that I hadn't expected and there's also a lot of plot ideas that will make great talking points. It also has a couple of really strong messages in the plot but they did (just) seem natural parts of the story rather than preachy.

I'm not always overly keen on 'If you like xxx you'll love this' tags for books but as an adult I think that if you are an Andy Weir or Doctor Who fan you're likely to enjoy this - just don't forget you aren't the target audience.

The thing I like the most about this book is that Peake is quite open that he has co-written this with another (excellent) author - there's no hidden ghost writer or false claims about authorship. Having read books by both Cole and Peake I can 'hear' them both in this one and I think that the book is all the stronger for this.

Thanks to Dad/Grandad for sharing his prize, and to Kentishbookboy for letting me sneak my read in!


Sunday, 14 February 2021

An entry from KentishBookBoy

 

Retelling the classics

Like the majority of school children the Kentishbookboy has been learning from home since the new year and once in a while I have been called to see if I can help explain a question from the work set. Who knew that in America the terms trapezium and trapezoid have the exact opposite definitions to the ones we use this side of the pond? I guess I've learned something from the Year 6 maths curriculum too!

All the English work has been centred around the Oscar Wilde story The Selfish Giant. Thanks to the eBook library service I was able to also download the story and read along with KBB and be involved in the work. It was good to stretch my mind and look at a text in a critical way again.

The final task for the class was to rewrite the story but from a different viewpoint, my first thought was to pretend to be one of the children and to retell it in the first person but Kentishbookboy decided to use the third person but make it all about the giant.

The feedback came from the school this week and we found out that if they'd been in school the work would have won a 'head teacher's award,' it has also been featured on the school's blog for year 6. Unsurprisingly we are all very proud of this piece of work - he had no help in writing this, the first we saw of it was when he was ready to submit!

Usually KBB and I have a 'Valentine's Day Out' around now but this year it can't happen, and while we're planning lots of fun as soon as it is allowed my Valentine for him is to publish his writing here.

THE SELFISH GIANT

By Kentishbookboy


Every weekday, as they were returning home from another school day, the children went and played in the Giant’s enormous garden.

It was a massively vast area, with smooth, lime-green grass. Gorgeous peach trees were here and there, while multi-coloured flowers in bunches were scattered around the lawn. Sweet-voiced birds were perched precariously on the trees, singing their heart out as if at a concert. Every so often, the children would pause in their game and listen to its beautiful, high-pitched voice.

“How we love it here!” the children would shout into the cloudless sky.

One fine day, the Giant returned home. He had stayed with a friend in Cornwall for almost seven years and was surprised to see the children playing in his once-pristine garden and wrecking it! “What do you think you’re doing in my garden?” he boomed at them. Petrified, the poor children fled the grounds and out of the gates.

Distraught that they’d trespassed into his property, the Giant constructed a towering stone wall around the perimeter and wrote a notice:

ANY TRESPASSERS WILL BE PROSECUTED

He was a very self-centred Giant.

The hapless children didn’t have anywhere to play in. They found playing on the road boring because of the hard stones and dust. They strolled around the garden border after lesson time, and conversed about the pretty garden and its wonders inside. “How we loved it there”, they said to each other.

The Spring soon came, stunning blossoms and birds coming out all over the country. However, in the Giant’s garden, it remained winter. The birds daren’t sing because of the children being forbidden, and the marvellous peach trees forgot to bloom. One time, a flower awoke, lifting its head above the soil, but it saw the notice and slid back amongst the soil again.

Snow and Frost were the only people who were pleased that Spring had forgotten the garden. “We will live here all year through.” they decided. With a sweep of her great white cloak, Snow covered the grass, while the Frost decorated the trees with silver. The North Wind came and roared all day, damaging buildings as he went. They invited Hail to visit, and he came. He constantly rattled the roof tiles until most broke off. Dressed in grey, breath like ice, he was a force to be reckoned with. 

“The Spring is so late in arriving, and I don’t know why,” said the Giant, who was resting on the windowsill. “I wonder when the weather will improve.”

But however much he pondered it, the Spring never turned up in his garden, nor the Summer. Autumn came and produced rich, succulent fruits, but none to the Giant’s trees. Winter, it seemed, was permanent in his garden. 

The Giant was resting on his bed one crispy morning, when he awoke to gorgeous music outside. It was a beautiful linnet chirping away in the early sunlight, but since the Giant hadn’t heard birdsong in ages, it was the greatest sound on the planet to his ears and as he jumped out of bed, he was pleased to think that Spring had finally come again.

Children had snuck in via a hole in the wall, scurrying through the blossoms, sitting down on the trees. Birds were singing their little hearts out, soaring above the branches. One tree, though, was still in winter, and underneath, a tiny boy. 

The tree bent down its branches for the boy to climb up on, but the juvenile boy was just too small to reach.

Hard heart dissolving, he realised how selfish he’d been. “I will put that boy into the tree, knock down the wall and my garden will be the children’s playground forever.” The children ran for their lives when they saw him, but the boy, who was too busy crying, didn’t notice the Giant behind him. When he placed the boy in the tree, it at once bloomed with flowers. Grateful, the boy reached down and kissed the Giant on the neck.

The children who’d ran away noticed that the Giant wasn’t being selfish or cruel to the boy, so they ran back and joined in the fun again. And the people going to the market at noon saw the Giant playing with the children in the prettiest garden ever.

At the end of the day, the Giant went to the gate to bid them goodnight. “Where is that little boy?” he asked.                                                                                                         “We don’t know,” the children replied. “He must have gone away”

This made the Giant very disappointed.

The little boy was never seen again, even as the Giant aged and became ancient and frail. He could only watch the children play now, and while they did that, he admired his garden.

One misty winter morning, the old Giant looked out at his garden while dressing. He knew that his flowers were getting their winter kip, and Spring would be back soon. Then he saw it: the farthest tree was covered with bright white blossoms, sparkling silver fruit, and underneath it, the little boy that had kissed him all those years ago!


In hastened joy the Giant dashed downstairs, across the garden and then stopped abruptly before the boy. His face was red with anger and all he wanted to know was who had hurt the boy. The Giant could see that there were the imprints of nails in his hands and feet. He was relieved when the boy replied, “Do not worry, for these are Love’s wounds. You let me have fun in your garden; you shall now join me to go to my garden; Paradise.”

And so when the children ran into the garden to play, they found the Giant under the tree, white blossoms all over him, unmoving.                                                           






 

Friday, 5 February 2021

Family Reading in 2021

 

Tom's Midnight Garden by Philippa Pearce (Oxford University Press)

Library Book

Although the new school year for the Kentishbookboy hasn't included writing book reviews so far we are still reading books together occasionally,  the first one for 2021 was Tom's Midnight Garden. I remember reading this a child, and then again more recently when I was studying children's literature. I think that we picked this book  as opposed to any other as it was on a list of titles that were recommended for Year 6 pupils.

The Kentishbookboy (and his mum) didn't fall in love with the book in the same way that I had as a child, they found Tom himself to be an annoying character and I can see where they are coming from. He certainly isn't very much like the 'heroes' of more modern books.

I was more surprised at how old fashioned the book felt on this reread. Then I did some sums... the book was written in 1958 and I imagine that it was a contemporary setting. The time travel takes us back to the 1890s. This means Tom travels around 60 years in time. However reading the book now (2021) we are travelling back the same amount of time to meet Tom - the culture shock for the Kentishbookboy was the same as Tom's!

I still love the book, but again it is definitely a book shadow that I was remembering - scenes that I recall as being huge and important (because of the pictures they created in my mind) actually came at the very end of the book and weren't as pivotal as I thought. There were huge chunks of Hatty's story that I'd forgotten. As well as the very 1950s attitudes of Tom's aunt & uncle.

I'm a bit sad that the Kentishbookboy didn't love the book as much as I did but Tom's life was far closer to being one I recognised - I was only reading it with a 30 year gap after all and there hadn't been quite the same technological advances in those 3 decades as we've seen since the 1990s. Perhaps I should try to find him a modern classic (not fantasy) that has the same age gap between setting and now to see how that fares...

Sunday, 27 December 2020

Book Bingo update number 3

 

What Nanny Read

Poor nanny really lost her reading mojo this year. The pandemic and initial lockdowns all started while she and the Kentishbookboy's grandad were enjoying a holiday in Australia and the very stressful end to that, and the libraries being closed, really impacted on reading.

It didn't help that with visiting from family also limited there were less physical copies of books to share around. 

All of this allowing Nanny J still ticked off the following books from the bingo sheet:

A book set pre 1950: The Habit of Murder

A non-fiction book: The Private Life of the Hare

A book recommended by a friend: Secrets of Santorini

A book with animals as the main characters: The Umbrella Mouse

A Book chosen by Norfolkbookworm: The Night of the Flood*

A book from the school list: Clockwork

A Book set in another country: Umbrella Mouse to the Rescue

Free choice: The Uncommon Reader 


I am sure that Nanny J has read more than this in total but in a year as crazy as 2020 managing one book from each row seems an achievement to me! It also shows how good books written for children can be as all of us really recommend the Umbrella Mouse books.


*The eagle-eyed reader will notice that I (Norfolkbookworm) picked this as the book that nanny recommended to me - this can be explained in that Nanny J heard people talking about this and pointed it out to me, I then bought it, read it and afterwards passed it on as one to definitely bump to the top of the pile!



Thursday, 24 December 2020

Book Bingo update 2 (Norfolkbookworm's sheet)

 

House!

Unlike the Kentishbookboy I've not been ticking my sheet off as I've been reading - which was a huge mistake. However as I do keep a full reading diary I have gone through that today and discovered that, pretty much by accident, I can tick off every square too!

This isn't necessarily a reflection of the books that will be in my top reads of the year but I am pleased that I haven't let the side down!


Kentishbookboy's choice: Harry Potter rereads

Non-fiction: Limitless (Tim Peake's autobiography)

Set in another country: The Cat and the City (Japan)

Norfolkbookworm's Choice: Girl, Woman, Other

Set pre 1950 - Hamnet

A book from the school list: Clockwork

A book with magic in: The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue

A graphic novel or comic: March vols 1-3

Recommended by a friend: Mudlarking

A funny book: Why Mummy's Sloshed

A book from the school list: A Bear Called Paddington

A book with animals in: The Travelling Cat Chronicles

A book recommended by nanny or grandad: The Night of the Flood

Free choice: The Island & the sequel One August Night

A poetry book: White Ink Stains

A book recommended by mum or dad: Umbrella Mouse to the Rescue

Some of these are likely to make lists at the end of the month/start of January but even subconsciously I think I've been picking books that tick the bingo boxes!





Wednesday, 23 December 2020

What the Kentishbookboy read 2020

 

Book Bingo 2020

I stand in awe of my nephew, with everything that 2020 has thrown at him he's just one square away from completing his bingo chart from the start of the year!

I'm not 100% sure I can say the same about my sheet and Nanny has already said that she's totally lost her reading mojo this year. 

Although he had ticked off some of the squares at the start of the challenge the definitive list of what books he'd like to count for each square are:



  • Kentishbookboy's choice: Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire
  • Non-fiction: Sharks and other deadly ocean creatures
  • Set in another country: The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe
  • Norfolkbookworm's choice: The Highland Falcon Thief
  • Set pre 1950 - Carrie's War
  • A book from the School list - Varjak Paw
  • A book with magic in: Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban
  • A graphic novel: The 13 Storey Treehouse series
  • A book recommended by a friend: The Train to Impossible Places
  • A funny book: 117-Storey Treehouse
  • A book from the school list - The Lion and the Unicorn
  • A book with animals in - The Umbrella Mouse to the Rescue
  • A book recommended by Nanny or Grandad - to be confirmed, possibly Wind in the Willows
  • Free choice: The Umbrella Mouse
  • A poetry book: A Poem a  Day
  • A book picked by mum or dad: Wonderscape
As well as this list of books Kentishbookboy has also shared his reading log with us, although none of us are convinced that this is 100% accurate as we suspect that there has been some rereading and sneak reading after lights out that isn't accounted for here! Well if he's anything like the Norfolkbookworm was as a child this is definitely the case!




As things stand, with just over a week of the year to go the Kentishbookboy is calling Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire as his top book of the year.







Sunday, 26 July 2020

Equally (or sequel-ly) brilliant!

Umbrella Mouse to the Rescue - Anna Fargher


Originally due to be published in April I've had an advance copy of this book sitting on my Kindle for many months and it has been burning a hole in my curiosity too! I put off reading it for two reasons. Firstly book one was *so* good I was nervous about the sequel  - could it be as good?

The second reason was more personal, half of the joy from book one was reading it along side my family and the heated texts and messages we shared as we read the book. What with the pandemic we've not been able to really get together much this year and so I wanted the closeness that shared reading brings!

When the copy for Kentishbookboy arrived it just so happened that it was one of the weeks his year group was at school but I'm afraid to say neither his mum nor I could wait any longer and we spent every spare moment over two days reading and messaging.

After the climactic and traumatic ending of the first book we were plunged straight back in to Pip's world and like the first book there were moments of tenderness, fear, and excitement as the adventures across France continued. There were so many historical points covered and coupled with the realistic show of emotions and actions that warfare causes I often forgot that the cast were a mix of animals rather than a group of disparate human resistance fighters!

Being an adult and knowing how the real history of 1944 played out in France meant I was pretty sure how the adventure was going to end but the journey there, through the eyes of a band of animals, was gripping and at times downright scary! And the epilogue was (implausibly) perfect for me - a real pleasure to know that this was a complete story and there wouldn't be dozens of further sequels each becoming more far fetched.

Personally I think that the two Umbrella Mouse books deserve to become as popular as War Horse, The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas & Good Night Mr Tom in the way they introduce so many different aspects of war to young readers.

I'm looking forward to hearing what Kentishbookboy and his nan & grandad think when they read the book - hopefully it won't be too long before we can all get together and have a proper book group chat in person.

Saturday, 13 June 2020

Reading Break


Both the Kentishbookboy and I have lost our reading mojo a little bit right now - partly because of the Coronavirus changing so much of daily life and partly because in May the weather was sooooo glorious we spent as mush time out doors as possible.

In fact in May I only read 7 books which is the lowest figure in years (the months following my SAH not included).

June has started in a better fashion for me, partly because the weather has changed I think but hopefully we'll have more book chat to share soon!