Tag: Friendship

  • Orangeboy
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    Orangeboy

    Patrice Lawrence’s Orangeboy is about a sixteen-year-old boy called Marlon. When he was younger, his older brother Andre went down the wrong path, a path that Marlon swore to his mum never to take. When a date ends in disaster, Marlon is left to pick up the pieces and in serious danger. They want Mr.…

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  • The Cow Who Fell To Earth

    The Cow Who Fell To Earth

    When I think back to my childhood, it’s like a slowmo rerun of the ‘Wonder Years’; barefoot brats pedalling through suburbia, spokey dokes clacking and Joe Cocker wailing in the background. Fast-forward a couple of years and I’m leafing through a Judy Blume while Roxette’s ‘Dressed for Success’ reverberates from my boombox. Then… High school.…

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  • One Silver Summer

    One Silver Summer

    One Silver Summer is the debut novel from Rachel Hickman. It’s the beginning of summer. Both Sass and Alex have escaped to Cornwall. Sass is recovering from the death of her mother, whilst Alex is escaping from the news that his Royal parents are set to divorce. “This was where he belonged, where he could…

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  • Branford Boase Award 2017: Shortlist

    Branford Boase Award 2017: Shortlist

    Seven debut authors shortlisted for award known as ‘the one to watch’ Stars of the future named on the shortlist for the award that singles out the most talented debut authors for children. Two from Chicken House on the shortlist including Waterstones Children’s Book Award winner Girl of Ink and Stars by Kiran Millwood Hargrave.…

    Read more: Branford Boase Award 2017: Shortlist
  • The Secret Keepers

    The Secret Keepers

    This is my first Trenton Lee Stewart book and – oh my days – what a multi-layered, beautifully written, epic adventure The Secret Keepers was. Written in a thoroughly absorbing voice, this story is about a boy called Reuben who randomly discovers a watch that can turn him invisible. Yes, this sounds a little frivolous…

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  • The Unexpected Visitor

    The Unexpected Visitor

    You can see a lot of things from our very narrow veranda in Australia. The very narrow veranda runs along our very yellow house, which faces the cobalt Coral Sea. And when you sit on the very narrow veranda, it’s a bit like sitting in the aisle of a bus. So Mum and Dad bought…

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  • One Italian Summer

    One Italian Summer

    One Italian Summer, from Keris Stainton, is an intriguing YA novel which tenderly deals with grief, and the strength of sisters. Three sisters, Milly, Elyse and Leonie are off to Italy for the summer with their mother. Normally this would be a wonderful opportunity to reconnect with extended family and soak up the wonderful Italian…

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  • Love Is

    Love Is

    At the time of writing this, it was very early on Tuesday 23rd May. I woke up, switched on the news and children were fleeing a concert in Manchester. Children. Parents were on the radio, desperate to find their missing kids. It was, and it still is, unbearably heart breaking. Someone, somewhere, once wrote: “As…

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  • Charlie’s Promise

    Charlie’s Promise

    November 1938 and the second World War is just around the distant corner. In Annemarie Allan’s middle grade novel, Charlie’s Promise, Josef and his mum find themselves at the docks waiting to board a boat setting sail for Scotland. Sadly, she doesn’t have enough money to send them both. Taking the heartbreaking decision to save…

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  • Who Let the Gods Out

    Who Let the Gods Out

      If you like funny books, read this now. I could actually leave my review at that, but in the interest of conscientiousness, I had better say a little more. Who Let the Gods Out, written by Maz Evans, is the tale of Elliot, who lives with his mum on their old family farm. He has…

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  • Grumpy Frog

    Grumpy Frog

    Grumpy Frog is NOT grumpy, he’s quite insistent about this fact – even when questioned by a rather knowing narrator. But, this particular frog does like very particular things… the colour green, hopping, and winning. No other colour will do, no other activity will do (even when his friends ask him to do other things),…

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  • My Very Own Space

    My Very Own Space

    So much for waking up to the sound of birdsong… It’s 05:30. I’ve woken to a sodden nappy on my face. Ben, our one year old, likes to clamber into the bed and lie not near us, not beside us, but on us. If we’re lucky he’ll offer to share his dummy. The kids wake…

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  • Noah Can’t Even

    Noah Can’t Even

    Noah Can’t Even is the hilarious debut novel from YA writer Simon James Green. It’s a sensitive, yet giggle inducing coming-of-age tale with hints of Adrain Mole-esq quirkiness. Green’s narrative delves straight into the mind of his hapless character, Noah Grimes – who does, by the way, have his very own Twitter account. It’s just him…

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  • Mold And The Poison Plot

    Mold And The Poison Plot

    Ever had one of those days where nothing goes your way? Young Mold’s life really isn’t going well… Being dumped in the dustbin as a baby wasn’t a great start! Things improved considerably when Aggy took him in, but then it all started going wrong again. The King was poisoned, Aggy was arrested and then…

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  • Alex Sparrow and The Really Big Stink

    Alex Sparrow and The Really Big Stink

    Alex Sparrow And The Really Big Stink is the brilliantly funny middle grade debut novel from author Jennifer Killick. Alex Sparrow, was cruising along in Year 6, ‘life was awesome’… until one day it wasn’t. While his parents were out on a date night or as Alex refers to it – “an embarrassing, old-married-people thing”…

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