Showing posts with label marcus sedgwick. Show all posts
Showing posts with label marcus sedgwick. Show all posts

Thursday, 2 December 2021

Christmas Children's Books Round-up for Literary Review


As sure as eggs are eggs, here comes my 94th Children's Book Round up for that estimable organ, Literary Review. You can read it here. Featured books are:

Dark Peak by Marcus Sedgwick

The Chime Seekers by Ross Montgomery

The Red Gloves and Other Stories by Catherine Fisher

Utterly Dark and the Face of the Deep by Philip Reeve

Sisters of the Lost Marsh by Lucy Strange

The Shadows of Rookhaven by Padraig Kenny

Fireborn by Aisling Fowler.

Saturday, 1 June 2019

June Children's Book Round up for Literary Review 2019

My latest children's book round up for the June issue of Literary Review.

Books reviewed:

Voyages in the Underworld of Orpheus Black

By Marcus and Julian Sedgwick

Walker Books 320pp £12.99

The Good Thieves

By Katherine Rundell

Bloomsbury 336pp £12.99 

The Time Travel Diaries

By Caroline Lawrence

Piccadilly Press 272pp £6.99

Diver’s Daughter

By Patrice Lawrence

Scholastic 176pp £6.99 

The Closest Thing to Flying

By Gill Lewis

Oxford University Press 240pp £6.99 

The Unexpected Find

By Toby Ibbotson

Scholastic 400pp £6.99

The Descenders

By Paul Stewart and Chris Riddell

Doubleday 528pp £14.99

 

Thursday, 28 November 2013

Telegraph Christmas Books Round Up

Sally Gardner: Hot stuff
Hello all: December creeps towards us, and what better time than to think about what books to get for any children of your acquaintance. Here's my round up of the best of this year, done for The Telegraph. It features a host of novels, from Sally Gardner, Emma Carroll, Katherine Rundell, Marcus & Julian Sedgwick, F E Higgins, Philippa Gregory, Anthony McGowan; my review of Patrick Ness' More Than This was cut, so I've pasted it here below:

 Patrick Ness’ More Than This (Walker Books, £10.99, 477pp), is a book which descends from our anxieties about our universe, as seen in films such as The Matrix. What is this strange world on which we live, and what if it was all a simulacrum? Ness’ treatment of his troubled gay hero is thoughtful and brave – which more than makes up for the slightly creaky premise.

Sunday, 22 July 2012

Children's Books for the Summer: Magic, wine and butterflies

On the first genuinely sunny day this (purported) summer, it seems appropriate to post my round ups of summer reading for children and teens - I've done them for The Telegraph. You can check them out here and here - they included the ever-brilliant Caroline Lawrence and Marcus Sedgwick, a fantastically delightful comic book-style adventure from Guy Bass, Philippa Gregory's first teen novel and a mysterious fantasy from Frances Hardinge.

Tuesday, 1 March 2011

North Lanarkshire Catalyst Book Award Longlist


I've just found out the longlist for the North Lanarkshire Catalyst Award - and I'm thrilled to be on the same list as such brilliant children's writers. This is the full list:

* Day of the Assassins by Johnny O’Brien
* Dead boy Talking by Linda Strachan
* Drawing with Light by Julia Green
* Fallen Grace by Mary Hooper
* Firebrand by Gillian Philip
* Grass by Cathy MacPhail
* Halo by Zizou Corder
* Inside My Head by Jim Carrington
* Out of Shadows by Jason Wallace
* Poison Diaries by Maryrose Wood
* Return to the Lost World by Steve Barlow and Steve Skidmore
* Revolver by Marcus Sedgwick
* The Bride’s Farewell by Meg Rosoff
* The Liberators by Philip Womack
* The Returners by Gemma Malley
* The Thin Executioner by Darren Shan
* The Witching Hour by Elizabeth Laird
* Time Riders by Alex Scarrow
* Unhooking the Moon by Gregory Hughes
* When I was Joe by Keren David
* Where I Belong by Gillian Cross
* Witchfinder: Dawn of the Demontide by William Hussey

The excellent Meg Rosoff; the marvellous Marcus Sedgwick; the brilliant Mary Hooper; Gillian Cross - who wrote one of my (and I'm sure everybody's) favourite books as a child, The Demon Headmaster... the list is a fantastic one, and I am so excited even to be mentioned amongst such company that I think I'm going to crack on with my next book so that I've got a chance of getting on it next year as well...