Sunday, 2 May 2010
The Kraken Wakes - John Wyndham
This is the second book this year I have read that has kept me awake at night with an uneasy dread. The way that Wyndham builds up tension is incredible, starting with unexplained fireballs and building up to the almost destruction of the world. By having a journalist tell the story you get enough information to keep you hooked but it isn't bogged down unnecessary exposition (sorry Basil!) There are some genuinely scary moments, especially with the sea tanks and the way that governments ponder and delay while The Kraken Wakes.
"Running, or at least hurrying, figures were still scattering over the Square in all directions, but no more were emerging from the street. Those who had reached the far side turned back to look, hovering close to doorways or alleys into which they could jump swiftly if necessary. Half a dozen men with guns or rifles laid themselves down on the cobbles, their weapons all aimed at the mouth of the street. Everything was much quieter now. Except for a few sounds of sobbing, a tense, expectant silence help the whole scene. And then, in the background, one became aware of a grinding, scraping noise; not loud but continuous."
Sunday, 25 April 2010
Mr Stink - David Walliams
This book made me love and appreciate Roald Dahl even more; not that this book isn't a well-written, funny, touching tale, but it just lacks some essential, mysertious Dahlness. The characters are good, the horrible mum who is truly repugnant in many ways and the ineffectial dad who lets her bully Chloe. The story bowls along and has some very funny moments and since there will be no more Dahl books this one will do!
"Mr Stink stank. He also stunk. And if it is correct English to say he stinked then he stinked as well. He was the stinkiest stinky stinker who ever lived.
A stink is the worse type of smell. A stink is worse that a stench. And a stence is worse than a pong. And a pong is worse than a whiff. And a whiff can be enough to make your nose wrinkle."
The Host - Stephenie Meyer
Monday, 19 April 2010
This is a typical American novel; beautifully written almost poetic, terse and masculine writing and a sparsely written plot. It is a very interesting look at war, after the major conflict how people cope with the continuing horror and monotony of military life. Stryon explores two coping mechanisms through Culvert and Mannix and how men who grew up in a conformist world are finally being to rebel.
"It had all come much too soon and Culver had felt weirdly as if he had fallen asleep in some barracks in 1945 and had awakened in a half-dozen years or so to find that the intervening freedom, growth and serenity had been only a glorious if somewhat prolonged dream."
Read more;
+ http://www.enotes.com/short-story-criticism/styron-william
Sunday, 18 April 2010
The Statement - Brian Moore
This is a study of old men and how humans manage to survive - survive being on the run and also survive guilt of crimes committed. Brossard is a man not to be hated but pitied, the way he wriggles and contorts in order to stay on the run and also justify his existence; to himself and to his God. It is also a study of power and how people in power can manipulate events.
It is a calmly told story that underlies and emphasises the horror of what happened and what is unfolding in the story.
"Again he saw the stranger coming towards him lifting the briefcase, taking out the revolver. If I had let my guard down after all these years, if I had lost that sense of being followed? But God be thanked, He protected me in the past. I must give thanks tonight at Devotions. But no, I can't stay for Devotions. Some vineyard worker passing above that ravine will see the car. And the police will come here, for this road leads only to the abbey. Get up. Pack."
Read more;
Thursday, 15 April 2010
Auslander - Paul Dowswell
You would think with a topic like World War Two every story has been told and every horror revealed but by telling the story through the eyes of a child Dowswell shows the true horror of what the Nazis did - how they corrupted and warped normal life. He shows how a normal boy can be seduced by the Nazis and the culture of fear and suspicion that permeated German life at that time. Yet this is not a preachy book that you feel you should read but a thrilling story that grips you from the first and only lets you go when you have finished.
"It was a sad, rotten business, not being able to trust people. Anna had always known that she and her family were different. Finding out who else was like them was a dangerous, treacherous game. The Gestapo, they had heard, sent agent provocateurs to catch people out. It was even whispered someone would tell an anti-Hitler joke, and then report you if you laughed, or even report you if you did not report them for telling the joke."
Read more;
+ http://www.pauldowswell.co.uk
Wednesday, 14 April 2010
The Incredible Adam Spark
Alan Bissett is a very Scottish writer (like Gordon Legge in fact) not just in his use of dialect but in his style and love for Scotland in all its (dis)glory. Adam Spark is a rollercoaster ride inside the head of the narrator - and you constantly have to stop and think about what is actually happening and often it is not what Adam thinks. Like Flowers for Algernon you feel a real sympathy for Adam as he struggles with life but there is also gallons of humour as he negotiates his way through growing up in Hallglen. Nobody, not Glasgow yooni students or the H-Glen animals, really escapes Bissett's wit.
"So how did it feel sparky when you were out there using your powers for good not evil? Well im just glad i could do a job for the manager and the rest of the boys. And do you think theres too much pressure on you as the teams star player? No not at all. Im just getting ma head down trying to use ma powers for the benefit of humanity. And if I can help a few friends along the way (shrug) all the better. Sparky you are a true champion. Thanks now if you dont mind im gonnay join the rest of the boys in the bath with the trophy. Absolutely sparky you deserve it. There goes a hero ladies and gentlemen. Away to was his tadger."
Read more;
+ http://www.alanbissett.com/
+ http://www.guardian.co.uk/profile/alanbissett
Sunday, 11 April 2010
Scat - Carl Hiaasen
Carl Hiassen's books always seems to seethe with anger about the stupidness of people and the unthinking (or sometimes thinking) cruelty to animals and the planet we are all living in and Scat is no different. However he also infuses his books with hope - that for every selfish eejit there is more people who care and who are prepared to help each other and others. Nick is a brilliant example of that, a ordinary boy who just happens to have it in his power to save an noble animal. Very enjoyable book
"The day before Mrs Starch vanished, her biology students trudged silently, as always, in the classroom. Their expressions reflected the usual mix of dread and melancholy, for Mrs Starch was the most feared teacher at the Truman School.
When the bell rang, she unfolded stiffly, like a crane, and rose to her full height of nearly six feet. In one hand she twirled a sharpened pencil, a sure sign of trouble to come."
Read More
+ http://www.carlhiassen.com/books/books-scat.html
Tuesday, 6 April 2010
26a - Diana Evans
This book is like entering a magical kingdom, where imagination and joy seep into every page, until, like in the twins life reality seeps in. All characters have their own back story that brings them to life, and you feel real sypmathy for all the characters, especially Georgia and her fragile hold on life. Evans has a talent for depicting the descent into depression and it surrounds and envelopes you. 26a is not a depressing book, however - it crackles and fizzes with life throughout its 230 pages.
"She had developed a strong aversion to sugar. Sugar was like funfairs and love, music with words and lipstick with lipgloss, it was sudden movement glitter and carnival hotpants, flapjack empires that wasn't famous, wild fields and Hendrix in the forest, walking the clouds with Bessi, watching the sea with Toby, all of that, all of that outside. Sugar was alive. Sugar was an accusation"
Read more;
+ http://www.3ammagazine.com/liarchives/2005/apr/interview_diana_evans.html
+ http://www.dianaomoevans.com
The Hunger Games; Catching Fire - Stephanie Meyer
Suzanne Collins writes thrilling fiction, the true definition of a unputdownable book - like Katniss and the other player in The Hunger Games you are never quite sure what is happening next. The central character is well rounded and believable, with human flaws that make you like her even when you are annoyed with her. It is a depressing read, because it depicts the negative aspects of human beings so well but also the hope that one human being can inspire in others.
"All I was doing was trying to keep Peeta and myself alive. Any act of rebellion was purely coincidental. But when the Capitol decrees that only one tribute can live and you have the audacity to challenge it, I guess that's a rebellion in itself. My only defence was pretending that I was driven insane by a passionate love for Peeta. So we were both allowed to live. To be crowned victors. To go home and celebrate and wave goodbye to the cameras and be left alone. Until now."
Read more;
+ http://www.thehungergames.co.uk
+ http://www.suzannecollinsbooks.com
A Dirty Job - Christopher Moore
Christopher Moore is adept at taking strange, surreal situations and making them seem well, almost normal. Like Tom Holt he uses fantasy elements to explore the failing and strengths of the average Beta Male in a funny touching way. Its been a while since I have read this book (forgot I hadn't reviewed it!) and still I can remember key scenes, most memorably the two huge guard dogs protecting Charlie's daughter, and eating everything in sight.
"No one was out on the streets tonight except the junkies, the hookers and the homeless. After the f***ed up day in the City, most everyone had decided that it was just a better idea to stay in, safer. To the Morrigan (for all they cared) they were safer in their homes the same way a tuna fish is safer in a can, but no one knew that yet."
Read More;
www.chrismoore.com
Monday, 5 April 2010
The Bride's Farewell
More than anything; the well-written simplicity of the plot, the believable and likable characters, the believable depicts of a past time, this novel shows exactly things have changed for women and what freedom meant in past times. Pell is remarkable because she chooses life over marriage and without sounding too preachy, should be read by every teen girl - particularly those who judge their worth by how much fake tan they use.
"The open road. What a trio of words. What a vision of blue sky and untouched hills and narrow trails heading God knew where and being free - free and hungry, free and cold, free and wet, free and lost - who could mourn such conditions, faced with the alternative"
Read more;
+ http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/video/2009/oct/22/meg-rosoff-brides-farewell
+ http://www.spinebreakers.co.uk/books/thebridesfarewell/Pages/BookDetail.aspx
+ http://www.megrosoff.co.uk
Friday, 2 April 2010
City of Ghosts - Bali Rai
City of Ghosts is a powerful story that weaves elements of history, politics, fantasy and romance that like the city itself is all encompassing. The characters are believable and the love story between Bissen Singh and Lillian is touching and had me close to tears! Sometimes the research intrudes into the story and holds it back but overall it is a story that I would recomment to anyone who wants to find out more about India and Britain's imperial past.
"Instead, Gurdial turned his attention to the busy street. The myriad colours and sounds and smells made him smile. Amritsar was a wonderful city, constantly changing yet always familiar too. A city of tall, inward leaning buildings and narrow alleyways where the sun never shone; of wide open spaces too, bathed in sunshine and filled with numerous brightly coloured trees and plants and flowers."
Read more;
+ http://www.balirai.co.uk
Newes From The Dead - Mary Hooper
This is an engrossing tale beginning with Anne Green waking up; being enveloped in darkness and unable to move. You are eager to read on and discover why she was hanged and whether she will be discovered before the dissection happens. This novel is well researched but the research does not intrude into the story telling. All the characters are believable and you could imagine any of them having a real life behind the book. The scene in which Anne has her child is genuinely distressing and Mary Hooper shows how harsh life was.
"It is very dark when I wake. This isn't frightening in itself, because most of the year I rise in darkness, Sir Thomas insisiting that as much as possible of the house be put in order before any of the family are about. It is the quality of the darkness that is strange; blacker than black, soft and close about me.
Read more;
+ http://www.maryhooper.co.uk
+ http://cynthialeitichsmith.blogspot.com/2008/05/author-interview-mary-hooper-on-newes.html
Friday, 26 March 2010
Poetry Friday; Parrot by Gregory Benson
Parrot flames on his branch;
his beak is a battle axe.
His encircled eye
pierces what it sees.
He screams like a soprano;
moves among the leaves like a rock climber.
He dazzles the forest canopy
with primary colours. A celebration.
© Gerard Benson
Friday, 19 March 2010
Poetry Friday; Scream if You Want to Go Faster - Brian Whittingham
When the noise gets louder
and the crowds grow thick,
when the rides spin faster
and end so quick
the shifty
SUPERBOB attendant
gives your change in
precise neatly folded notes
that add up to nine for him,
and seven for you
as the anticipation
of your day gets drowned
by
empty metal buckets, with bouncing wooden balls
by
red plastic rings, that never circle glittering prizes
by
rifles with telescopic sights, that ensure you never
knock the clay pigeon from its perch
by
bingo playing fanatics, waiting on one
by
bubble light darts, that never find their target
by
gigantic football team balloons, that parents always carry
by
the jumbo juicy hot dogs, smothered in fried ketchup onions
by
voices in the air
telling you to
SCREAM
If you want to go faster
Brian Whittingham
Sunday, 14 March 2010
Article; Obesity: The killer combination of salt, fat and sugar
Of course, when food is offered to us, we're not obliged to eat it. When it's on the menu, we don't have to order it. But this takes more than willpower. As an individual, you can practise eating the food you want in a controlled way. As a society, we can identify the forces that drive overeating and find ways to diminish their power. That's what happened with the tobacco industry: attitudes to smoking shifted. Similar changes could be brought about in our attitudes to food – by making it mandatory for restaurants to list calorie counts on their menus; by clear labelling on food products; by monitoring food marketing. But until then few of us are immune to the ubiquitous presence of food, the incessant marketing and the cultural assumption that it's acceptable to eat anywhere, at any time.
David A Kessler
Friday, 12 March 2010
Poetry Friday; Days by Brain Moses
they escape like birds
release from cages.
What a shame you can’t buy
tokens of time, save them up
and lengthen the good days,
or maybe you could tear out time
from days the drag, then pay it back
on holidays, wild days,
days you wish would last forever.
You could wear these days with pride,
fasten them like poppies to you coat,
or keep them in a tin, like sweets,
a confection of days to be held on the tongues
and tasted, now and then.
Thursday, 11 March 2010
Welcome to My Planet, Where English Is Sometimes Spoken
I have to be brutally honest and say I can see why her therapist got so annoyed with her - why I finished this book about a self-obsessed, whiny pain in the ass twenty something I don't know. Think I wanted to see if anything actually happened and guess what...it didn't!
"What would you and Oprah talk about?"
"Our struggles," I say. "Our personal struggles"
"You don't have personal struggles," says the counsellor. "Not the way Oprah did and you know it"
(You see - Bluergh!)
Sunday, 7 March 2010
Saturday, 6 March 2010
The Enemy
This book is the very definition of the term "unputdownable" I started the book about five o'clock last night and finished about eleven the same night. It is like a rabid dog, grabbing you by the neck and shaking you repeatedly till it drops you, leaving you an odd mix of bewildered and exhilarated. Yes, this book follows the classic post-apocalypse formula but a) this is for kids and they won't know the formula and b) with writing this good and fast-paced who cares if as a seasoned reader you can kinda guess what happens next.
I am jealous that I am not under fourteen - partly because I would be a mindless zombie if I was a character in this story but mainly because this would be a GREAT book to read as a teenager!
The grown-ups took one look at each other, then turned and bolted, leaving their dinner behind.
Maxie laughed, Achilleus joined her. Blue put his arm around her waist. The other kids joined in and soon their laughter was bouncing round the square and echoing off the empty houses, filling the night, chasing away the demons.
Everything was going to be alright"
Read more;
- http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/books/fiction/article6812377.ece
- http://the-enemy.co.uk/site/teHome.php5
The Graveyard Book
As Bod grows up he begins to realise that perhaps his life is not like other boys; that is maybe not normal to live in a graveyard and have two ghosts as your adopted parents. However he soon realises that it is the strange life that saved his life as a baby and may save his life again...
There is something magical about a children's book that gets it right, something that transports to you to another world. It is impossible to describe the feeling I get when I read a beautifully crafted book so I suppose I should just suggest that you read this one and find out for yourself what the magic is!
"There was a hand in the darkness, and it held a knife. The knife had a handle of polished black bone, and a blade finer and sharper than any razor. If it sliced you, you might not even know you had been cut, not immediately.
The knife had done almost everything it was brought to that house to do, and both the blade and the handle were wet."
Find out more;
Sunday, 28 February 2010
Fab Film - Only Angels Have Wings
Loved this film - the actors were great, the story moving and funny and the ending just right! This scene with Jean Arthur and Cary Grant just after a pilot has died is just perfect!
The Abstinence Teacher
Ruth is a sex education teacher in a high school who is increasingly frustrated by the new abstinence curriculum. Tim is an ex-musician, ex-addict who is struggling with his faith and his marriage. Tim is also the football coach of Ruth's daughter and when the team prays at the end of a football match, Ruth and Tim's life collide.
The Abstinence Teacher is a thought-provoking book, not in a shout-the-loudest-speaker corner way but a gentle chat with someone you admire but disagree with way. Perrotta is more interested in seeing how his well-rounded characters make choices rather than using them as a way to score points in this complex debate about religion in America. The novel is also satisfying sloppy; not neat and happy endings just the feeling that the two characters that you have grow to love will continue to muddle through just as they always have.
"Later, after Tim left, she realised - though maybe it was a less of matter of realising than of being able to admit it to herself - that she'd secretly been hoping to find herself enmeshed in one of those corny "opposites attract" narratives that were so appealing to writers of sit-coms and romantic comedies...
Luckily for Ruth, this ridiculous fantasy crumbled immediately upon contact with reality"
Find out more;
In Between Talking About The Football
Gordon Legge has a real knack of writing about characters and events, so much so that you find yourself believing that these characters exist and what Legge is actually writing is snapshots of his own life. While he depicts Scottish life with all its positives and negatives it is done with a real love of this gallus nation that shines through the stories. The first story, Summers on the Dole, really shows what it means to have and be a mate and how life gets in the way (not bad for two pages!)
"The Big Man recalled the stories and The Tank made them funny. Hamish claimed to have done it all and Stuart looked like he had. Wendy never shut up and Grant hardly said a word: Wee Harry's the smartest guy you'd ever meet and Mikey's brains were in his dick.
There were nutters to be avoided, hangers-on to be ignored and casualties to be dumped"
Sunday, 21 February 2010
Article; Let them eat steak slice
"Being a teenage girl is hard. I could probably argue that it’s harder than being in a war. After all, the Taleban never pretend to be friends with the British forces for six months, and have sleepovers at each other’s bases — while all the time secretly spreading rumours that the British Army has one breast bigger than the other, and an uncle who’s a paedophile. Landmines, or everyone on a school coach trip shouting “LESBIAN!” at you? It’s a tough one to call."
Caitlin Moran
Hysterical and very true!
Hush Hush
Sigh. I made a promise to myself never again to read a book that I didn't enjoy, life is too short and there are too many good books in the world to waste time on rubbish writing. So there must be something in this book that I enjoyed - or maybe it is my masochistic streak coming out because looking back on it, I really didn't like this book.
I think it is maybe an age thing, I didn't really get the whole forbidden love thing and there were points in the plot that I just wanted to scream "Get on with it" There is a lot of interesting stuff here but nothing is really developed in any interesting way.
"I reached to turn up the radio. Of all things, there had to be something better to do than ruin our evening by inviting Patch, albeit abstractly, into it. Sitting beside him for one hour every day, five days a week, was plenty more than I could take. I wasn't giving him my evenings too"
Find out more;
The Devil You Know
Felix Castor is a hero in the Philip Marlowe sense; a loner who lives by his own complex but honest moral code. And while the novel deals with supernatural events it is essentially a detective novel as Castor unravels the difficult case at the Bonnington Archive. It is a brilliant pace-turning read that sucks you into the story as convincingly as Felix gets sucked into the case. Like The Heart Shaped Box, the true horror is from the ghosts but from the humans and the evil that is done by them - the description of what happens to the young girls in the story will stay with me for a long time.
"When I asked Dobson for the money he owed me for the performance, he punched me in the mouth. I took that in my stride: no teeth loosened, only a symbolic amount of bloodshed. I probably had that coming. He went for the camera next, thought, and I went for it too: me and that Brownie go backa long way, and I didn't want to have to go looking for another machine with such sympathetic vibes."
Find out more;
Saturday, 20 February 2010
Heart-Shaped Box
A little tip, do not read this book at night, especially when you are in a house in Shetland where cats yowl at three o'clock in the morning. This book is scary and haunting and lingers in your head like, well like Craddock's ghost. What is really good about this book is that is not just horrifying on a supernatural level but also explores the horror that human beings can perpetrate on other humans.
"The dead man faded back into existence long enough to wink. Then the breeze rose in a soft rush, and high above, the sun broke through for good, at a place where the clouds had been pulled into strings of dirty wool. The light shone strongly on the road and the dead man was gone.
Find out more;
Frankenstein's Aunt
Have you ever had a daft conversation that makes you laugh and every statement just makes you laugh more? This book is that conversation in print. Daft, stupid and crazy loaded on crazy - perfect Saturday morning reading with a cup of tea!
The writing is great, full of fabulous description and phrases, and with my teaching head on, great gothic elements!
Great work of literature? Nah! Fun, witty read? Yup!
"It was a damp night with low clouds racing across the sky, the thunder rumbling but still in the distance. Lightning lit up the whole sky with a flashing breathless blue light, the laps of thunder apparently coming from on high and then in long cracking tumbling waves descending into a rumbling mumbling rolling on the horizon, the rain pouring down, rustling and rattling in the undergrowth round the castle. A sharp bluish-white light shone out of the narrow windows in the laboratory tower."
Saturday, 6 February 2010
Everlost
We all know that when you die you see a bright light and head towards it, but what if something happens and you get knocked off course? When Nick and Allie die and get stuck in a strange, shadowy world called Everlost they have no idea that their desire to get home will have such a huge impact on those who reside in Everlost.
Having previously read Unwind by Neal Shusterman I was looking forward to reading this book; looking forward to a fast-paced, character based quirky thought provoking read. I wasn't disappointed - this book is a thriller at its heart and you race to find out what is going to happen, but like all good books, the ideas within the book keep popping into your head. The twists in the story are believable but breathtaking - at a few I even chuckled at the way he takes the story and twists and pulls it, like someone wringing out a dishcloth. Like the poor children who sink down to the core of the earth, this book has sunk into my brain and even now, over a week after I finished it, the characters and story keep popping into my head.
"Snow felt different than rain or sleet as it passed through Allie. It tickled. As for the wind, she felt it, and it was indeed cold. But like all other weather conditions, feeling it and being affected by it were two different things. The cold did not, could not, make her shiver. And yet as unpleasant as it seemed for the living people fighting the snowstorm, Allie wished she could be one of them."
Read More;
Sunday, 31 January 2010
Desert Island Discs (2)
Caravan of Love - Housemartins
Sunday, 17 January 2010
Why Books Remain Unread
http://www.abebooks.co.uk/books/difficult-hardest-reads-obscure-staff/remaining-unread.shtml?cm_mmc=nl-_-nl-_-r00-ar1001X-_-01cta
Pandaemonium
I have always read Christopher Brookmyre for the biting sarcasm and great plots, I never thought I would read him for all out scares. I started this book on Friday and stayed up all night to finish it! I even read the last chapter to find out what happens! It is like a chocolate eclair - the good stuff is not only in the surface horror but the deeper themes; to think about; religion, ethics, love, sex, relationships and the way we treat others and all included in this book. It also has an ending that does not disappoint! Most books I have read so far this year I have enjoyed this one I devoured...
Pain multiplies. It multiples in little ways, like Julie Meiklejohn going from bullied to bully, and in enormous ways, like Robert Barker's rage, the aftershocks of which they are all still suffering.
Kane looks at the tears forming in Guthrie's eyes, and at the sorrowful understanding in Sendak's, and wonders whether compassion can multiply too.
Read more;
Saturday, 9 January 2010
The Story of A Marriage
This book is one that you just have to keep reading, not because of any fast-paced action but because of the way that the writer reveals everything slowly and surely leaving the reader to question and ponder everything the way the Pearlie has to. While it can be frustrating that Pearlie and Holland never discuss the impending situation, it is not the frustration of a badly written character but of a friend frustrated with the foibles of a friend that you know and love. This book is just not a Story of A Marriage but a portrait of America in the 1950's, reeling from the war and undergoing a process that will change the country forever.
"It is madness not to do as you are told. Not to step forward from a hiding place, a deferral, from a line of frightened young men. But it is astounding how different men are; not all from the same clay, for when it comes to the kiln, some break wide open or change in ways even the maker can't predict."
Find out more;
The Men Who Stare At Goats
In 1979 the First Earth Battalion was created, not in George Lucas' brain or Robert A. Heinlen's notebook, but in the US Army. The First Earth Battalion believed in the power of the mind - to walk through walls, become invisible and more importantly kill goats just by staring at them. This sounds batty and made up but it isn't, Jon Ronson investigated this strange, mad but true story.
I never really believed the phrase jaw-dropping but after reading this book I do now! (as well as believing things that I never even imagined!) The story and the characters are just insane but Ronson just writes in a simple convincing style that makes you believe. He also drops in moment of true horror, where the ideals and beliefs of the First Earth Battalion has been twisted and corrupted to help the US Army tackle the War On Terror.
When he said the words "attack me" he did that quotation mark thing in the air with his fingers, which angered me a little because it implied I was incapable of mounting anything more than a figurative attack. I was indeed incapable, but I had known Pete only for a few minutes and I felt he was jumping to conclusions about me."
Find out more;
Monday, 4 January 2010
Stolen
Gemma is off on holiday with her parents when the mysterious Ty approaches her at the airport - initially flattered by the attention she little realises that he is actually planning to kidnap her and take her to live in the Australian outback. From that point on Gemma must survive and deal with the complex emotions that arises from this situation.
There are times when I wish I was a teen reader again, discovering books and stories for the first time - sometimes as an adult you read books with preconceived ideas and waiting for the author to follow the plan - and when they do it is really disappointing and a little dull. Lucy Christopher doesn't do that with Stolen and it really did read as something fresh, original and unsettling. You never really are allowed to make your mind up about Ty - is he a damaged young man needing sympathy or mentally ill and dangerous? Christopher also doesn't give you a nice, tied up ending like people expect from teen fiction but one that lingers in your mind for some time after reading.
"There were o car horns. No trains. No beeping pedestrian crossings. No lawnmowers. No planes. No sirens. No alarms. No anything human. If you'd told me then that you'd saved me from a nuclear holocaust, I might have believed you"
Find out more