Showing posts with label book reviewing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label book reviewing. Show all posts

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!

Thursday, 11 October 2018

Another long pause

Oh dear another large gap between posts. I am a terrible blogger right now.

I do have three good reasons (I refuse to call them excuses)...

I've been reading books for another project and so can't share them with you. As ever they've been a mixed bag and definitely taken me out of my reading comfort zone.

I've been out and about enjoying the lovely long, warm autumn that we've been lucky enough to be enjoying. It has felt very nice to get back out with my camera - I've put some of my pictures at the end of this post.

My final reason for the lack of posts (and books read) has been the culmination of a crazy 18 month project.  I've been working on WW1 commemorations since 2013 and after planning a real celebration for the start of the war in August 2014 (this may sound odd but in 1914 the UK really did think that the war would be quick, decisive and was a really patriotic moment) I wanted to end the centenary with a far more sober, reflective project.

My idea was to commemorate all of the men and women listed on Norfolk's War Memorials with a poppy.  It took several months to work out this figure - and we settled on 15,500 as being the best guess. Some men are commemorated on more than one panel or memorial and short of physically visiting every plaque, grave and memorial this best guess was decided on.

Well over the last 18 months poppies have been arriving for me at the library and I've been sorting and counting carefully.  As of this week we reached our target, all of the poppies are ready to go and even more amazingly a city centre venue for the 15,500 poppies has been offered.
After this en-masse display then the garlands will be split into smaller displays and sent to all of Norfolk's libraries (including the mobile vans) so that people can get just a small idea of how many people from Norfolk lost their lives between 1914 and 1919.

I am so pleased that despite having a brain hemorrhage the project was still shared widely while I poorly and that counting poppies and creating the displays is something I've been able to do while recovering.

If any of my readers are in Norwich later this month then all the poppies will be on display in St Peter Mancroft Church from around 11am on 22nd October until 29th October.