Monday, November 18, 2019
Tuesday, September 10, 2019
Review of Cuckoo Song by Frances Hardinge

Review of Cuckoo Song by Frances Hardinge
One day, a girl called Triss wakes up after falling into The Grimmer, a pond near her home in the imaginary English town of Ellchester. But something seems strange– she can’t remember anything about what happened, and her own home feels alien to her. As time goes on, the situation becomes yet more abnormal. Triss develops an insatiable appetite, and wakes up with twigs and leaves in her hair. Eventually, her appetite becomes so great that it cannot be satisfied with normal food... As she attempts to discover the truth about what happened on that fateful day, Triss is pulled into a web of mystery, lies, and betrayal, and she realises that nothing it what it appears to be. In order to restore peace, Triss must head into the hidden world below her town to confront a scheming architect and stop him from destroying her family.This book really captured my imagination- there is an ominous magic about it that draws the reader in. I felt that Frances Hardinge built the tension in a brilliant, gradual, way.
The characters were layered and 3-dimensional. Every character added to the book and helped build the story. The mysterious twists to the plot kept me hooked and got me to keep reading.I recommend this book to anyone from age eight upwards who enjoys a haunting, fascinating, mystery.
Thursday, July 18, 2019
Review of The Murderer's Ape by Jakob Wegelius
Review of The
Murderer’s Ape
Sally Jones is an engineer aboard the ship The Hudson Queen. She is intelligent, thoughtful, caring, and excellent at her job. She also happens to be a gorilla.
Sally Jones’s adventure begins in Lisbon, where her closest and only friend, Henry Koskela, is wrongly arrested on suspicion of murdering a man named Alphonse Morro. At first she despairs, but when she discovers that Morro may actually be alive, she sets off on a life-changing quest to India to find him and prove her friend’s innocence.
Despite her inability to speak, Sally Jones makes a wonderful protagonist. You feel sorry for her when her best friend gets taken away from her, you feel joy when she finds new companions and a place to stay, and you root for her as she begins her quest to find Alphonse Morro. As we follow her from Lisbon to Cochin, she befriends a young woman, learns how to make accordions, and plays a maharajah in a game of chess.
From a spoilt and wealthy maharajah to a humble accordion maker in Lisbon, this book is full of multi-layered, complex characters that pull you deeper into the story. Even the characters that only appear for a few pages are believable and interesting. The Murderer’s Ape is a tale of adventure, loss, loyalty, and determination. I was gripped from the very start. The characters are believable and multi- dimensional, the plotline is gripping, and the description is detailed and evocative. The Murderer’s Ape can be enjoyed by anyone of any age.
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