This is the first murder that the Wells and Wong detective society has ever investigated, so it is a good thing Daisy bought me a new casebook.
Wong is Hazel Wong and so Daisy must be Daisy Wells. Hazel is sent from China to go to a real English school, so her dad can prove he is better than his friend who sent his daughter to a fake English school. Hazel is a proper goody two shoes but she realises that in that particular school this is not the way to make friends. She treads on her text books and doesn't answer questions in class that she knows the answers to. But Daisy notices what she is doing and helps her. They make lots of societies together, and just as they make a detective society, complete with new casebook courtesy of Daisy, they find a body...
Murder Most Unladylike by Robin Stevens (Corgi 2014) is a book for mystery lovers. It is set in a school, which is awesome and it has a map, which is awesome too, but mostly it is a mystery, with an actual casebook of motives, alibis and all sorts. You know as much as Hazel and Daisy know between them, but it is not possible to guess who 'dun it'. It says for readers 9+ but I don't see why, as it's a perfectly normal murder.
My question for Robin Stevens is: when you write, how do you keep it a secret if YOU know all along who did it?
Robin Stevens replies: Robin Stevens here. I'm so glad you liked the book (it goes with your hat!) My answer is that I've had to get really good at keeping secrets. Not even my editor knows who the murderer is going to be before I send her the book, and I never talk about my murderers when I speak at events!
I also think that knowing who the murderer is makes me better at hiding it in each book. I can lay fake clues, and make the real clues seem very unimportant. I have a lot of fun with that, and I love tricking my readers!
I hope that answered your question!
All the best,
Robin
NonA AnoN
The best reviews of the best books
Sunday, 7 August 2016
Sunday, 29 June 2014
The Executioner's Daughter
She’d never get used to beheadings. No matter what Pa said.
Moss is the executioner’s daughter and basket girl. The
person who has to catch the heads when Pa cuts them off. She lives in The Tower
of London during Tudor times. She hates being the basket girl but her father
wants to stay in Tower to keep her safe...
This story is scary but not spooky because it is about
real life, mostly... Moss’s own story, set in the sharp detail of everyday
life, against the background of Tudor history.
What makes the book so exciting is the characters you meet and the fact
that you know the ending is going to happen but you don’t know whose side it
will be on.
Without giving away too much, you will meet The Ragged
Man with his huge moving sack, Two Bellies the bully, Salter the sneaky boot
stealer, Anne Boleyn and Nell who smells of wee.
The Executioner’s Daughter by Jane Hardstaff (Egmont 2014) is a capturing book that makes you want to keep reading. It’s as good as Rooftoppers which means it’s one of the best books I’ve ever read. I’d say it’s for about 9 plus because I got scared reading it at school and even my dad was scared when he read it! It may put off boys because the main character is a girl, but it is serious and sinister and not mundane like pony books or babyish like princess books.
My question for Jane Hardstaff would be if she is going to write a book about Salter?
Jane Hardstaff replies:
What a lovely review - thank you! I'm so glad you felt my story was better than mundane pony books. Maybe if someone were to write about evil ponies, that would be worth reading...When I wrote The Executioner's Daughter, it was always my hope that readers would live the story with Moss, so to hear you were excited (and scared) is brilliant. It's a tricky thing to write convincingly and scarily. Sometimes I use my own experiences and feelings to plunge myself into Moss' head. Anyway, I hope you weren't too traumatised!
To answer your question - am I going to write a book about Salter? Well, I am writing a sequel to The Executioner's Daughter. It's called River Daughter and is basically the story of what happens to Moss and Salter's friendship when an old acquaintance of Salters called Eel-Eye Jack, comes between them. So, there's a LOT of Salter in the next book. He's a joyous character to write - full of cussing and mischievous little sayings.
Anyway, good luck with your blog and your hair is the best.
Saturday, 12 April 2014
East of the Sun, West of the Moon
“In an iridescent sparkle of frosted light he appeared, a
huge white bear, shifting and shimmering into solid form.”
The bear came to her house. I can’t tell you her name
because you find it out much later in the book. She has dreamt of him many
times so she didn’t find it scary. Her father wrote for a newspaper and some of
the new rulers didn’t like what he was writing. So her family had to go to another
country. The bear says that if she goes with him, her family will get out of
the mess they are in...
The book is magical in its story and magical to read. A
girl, against the world, looking for her love. A magical world of animals,
Winds, castles, troll queens, and a real girl. The writing is beautiful and
exciting at the same time.
East of the Sun, West of the Moon by Jackie Morris (Frances Lincoln 2013) is for seven and a half year olds to about ten year olds because I don’t think anyone younger would understand it much because it is about hunting for love. This book is one of the best I have read, along with Rooftoppers. I would like to ask Jackie Morris if she thinks that children and adults will feel differently about the ending.
Jackie Morris (in the middle in the picture below) replies:
I think everyone who reads it will feel a little differently about the
ending. But maybe it's not an ending but a new beginning. Maybe the
characters will stay with you and you might wonder how he is, the bear
prince, and what she is doing? Does she still feel the wind under her
wings? And what of the castle that lies in that place, East of the Sun,
West of the moon? Who lives there now and do flowers carpet the whole
land around making it look as if snow has fallen? on East of the Sun, West of the Moon
Saturday, 1 March 2014
A Room Full of Chocolate
I wrote this fact down in my special blue book that I
use for my stories and plays.
I is Grace, a girl who is made to live with her grumpy
granddad that her mum says is an old goat, because her mum is in hospital. She
finds a friend called Megan who has a pet pig called Claude. Grace misses her
mum so much, even chocolate can’t make it better, but when Grace is with Megan
she sometimes sees visions of her mum playing with her friend Allie, Megan’s
mum.
The book is written in the first person, including some
diary entries. The diary pages are decorated by Grace with roller stamps and
pictures. The storytelling is lifelike and full of Grace’s hopes and fears.
A Room Full of Chocolate by Jane Elson (Hodder, 2014) is for anyone, including most boys sort of. The last bit is the best, but I’m not going to spoil it for you. I would like to ask Jane Elson if she has written her own experiences into the book?
Jane Elson has replied on Twitter: A Room Full Of Chocolate is semi autobiographical in parts. "Lovely to know that something that happened in my childhood is touching people's hearts through my book."
Sunday, 26 January 2014
The Mysterious Misadventures of Clemency Wrigglesworth
Clemency’s dad has died in a horse race so she’s left
with her mum. Clemency and her mum are going to find relatives in England but
her mum dies so Clemency goes alone. When the ship lands in England, Clemency
is taken in by a family who run a hotel: Leicester, Whitby, Gully and Aunt Hett.
There are so many people in their family, they are all called after the places
they were born because they are a travelling family. But then a mysterious lady
called Miss Clawe takes her away to find her real family...
The story unfolds in two places, so we follow Clemency
and her horrible life, but at the same time the Genuine Red Indians are hunting
for her. Gully and Whitby never give up hope so nor do we.
The Mysterious Misadventures of Clemency Wrigglesworth by Julia Lee (Oxford 2013) is an exciting read that is great for seven year olds and upwards as long as they know every book has a happy ending. I would like to ask Julia Lee why she thinks so many stories are about orphans.
Julia Lee replies:
That’s a really good question. It’s not just to make readers feel sad
about the orphaned character, I can assure you. If Clemency had been
well looked after by two nice, healthy, and sensible parents I wouldn’t
have had a story! There’s much more scope for exciting and challenging
things to happen with mum and dad out of the way for some reason. When
children find themselves alone and in charge, they have to work out what
to do, how they feel, who to trust, and so on, which gives the author
lots to write about.
A hundred years ago and more, health care and medicines were not nearly so effective, ordinary life was risky, and so children were much more likely to be orphans. It’s still true in some parts of the world today. Stories written or set in the past, or in other countries, will reflect this. But in most modern books, if parents are absent or useless, it’s for more modern reasons.
I'm so glad you enjoyed my book, and thank you for your great review! There's another story about Gully and the Marvel family coming out later this year.
A hundred years ago and more, health care and medicines were not nearly so effective, ordinary life was risky, and so children were much more likely to be orphans. It’s still true in some parts of the world today. Stories written or set in the past, or in other countries, will reflect this. But in most modern books, if parents are absent or useless, it’s for more modern reasons.
I'm so glad you enjoyed my book, and thank you for your great review! There's another story about Gully and the Marvel family coming out later this year.
Sunday, 12 January 2014
Seriously Sassy – Crazy Days
“It’s half seven in the morning and I’m in my Greenpeace
nightie, playing air guitar and belting out, “Yay! Life is great in every way!”
when I stop in my tracks cos the tiger on my wall poster’s staring at me
accusingly with two sad amber eyes.”
Sassy is a song-writer with the offer of a record
contract, who intends to use her fame and money to make the world a better
place. She is also on the hunt for a boyfriend but she has to chose between two
boys.
Sassy tries to change herself when the record deal
company decide they don’t want her. But when something really bad happens her
talents are needed.
I listened to the first Seriously Sassy book on a long
car journey and even my Dad didn’t complain. Reading the second one made me
laugh even more! Sassy, Taslima, Cordelia, Twig, Magnus, Digby, Dad and Megan
are all back to raise money and save the day.
Seriously Sassy – Crazy Days by Maggi Gibson and published by Puffin (2010). For readers 7 upwards because it is about boyfriends. The end will make you laugh out loud! I would like to ask Maggi Gibson how she came up with the idea for the end!
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Rooftoppers
Alongside The Executioner's Daughter, Rooftoppers is still possibly the best book of all. Click on Older Posts to read about it.