Showing posts with label Running away. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Running away. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 21, 2024

Raven Winter by Susanna Bailey


Billie and her mum have moved out of the family home because dad has been sent to jail following a crime involving money (sounds like a white-collar crime). Now mum has found a new partner but he is a horrible and aggressive man who holds an enormous amount of power over her mum. He has excluded their friends and he demands the house be kept spotlessly clean. He has 'hidden' all of her dad's possessions in the garage. Dad loved the outdoors and especially birds and he and Billie share a very special bond and so Billie desperately misses him and she is sure he has no idea that they have moved. She is also certain mum and dad can get back together and that dad can help mum understand Daniel is dangerous. 

Billie decides she needs to find her dad and this decision becomes even more urgent when she discovers letters from her dad hidden in a box under her mum's bed. When she first leaves home she finds a young raven with an injured wing. She abandons her plan and smuggles him into her room. Luckily this is the week Daniel is not home because he is a long-distance truck driver. For her second attempt to run away she decides to look in those boxes in the garage. Daniel is away again and she wants to find her dad's bird books but just as she is unpacking the boxes Daniel arrives home. His violent reaction is utterly terrible. So now Billie really does have to go. But how? Her new friend Nell has accidentally offered the perfect way to do this and Billie now has to stowaway as Nell and her grandmother drive to a market near where dad has been staying. 

Blurb: Ever since Billie’s kind and nature-loving dad went to prison, her life has lost its shine. And now, Mum’s new boyfriend has moved in and home is full of sharp-glass silences. Billie’s never felt more alone. Until one day she discovers an injured young raven and in nursing him back to life, Billie finds friendship, hope and a letter that might bring her one step closer to reuniting with Dad. Raven Winter is the story of friendship, family and the belief in a very special relationship with a young raven set against the beautiful and the wintery backdrop of the Yorkshire Dales.

This is a harrowing story, but I was sure Susanna Bailey would provide a happy ending or at least the glimpse of a better future so I kept reading Raven Winter even though at times I just had to stop, walk away and take a breath. This is a book for a very mature reader aged 11+ and not recommended for sensitive readers. Read a text sample here

Raven Winter does suggest domestic abuse and a parent who is absent due to being in jail – tough topics – but I think it is done sensitively and gently. ...  The bigger theme of the book in my view though is how children can find comfort in nature, how non-judgmental animals can help a child who feels alone, and how caring for someone or something outside of themselves, can be cathartic. Julia's Books

There are many strands to this powerful story and binding them together is a celebration of nature and its power to heal: what the author has achieved is a fine balance between sadness and beauty. Not everything is resolved but father and daughter are reunited and there’s hope for the future. There’s also a reassuring message to any reader in a situation similar to Billie about the importance of going to a trusted adult for help. Red Reading Hub

Companion books:





Here are other books by Susanna Bailey



Friday, June 7, 2024

Manxmouse by Paul Gallico

This book has twelve chapters and each reads like a short story. We first meet Manxmouse as he is created by a ceramic artist who specializes in making mice. On this night, however, he has been drinking and his newest mouse looks very odd. This chapter is entitled "The story of the Tiddly Mouse-Maker."

"In the first place it was not grey but an utterly mad blue. It had a fat little body like an opossum, hind feet like those of a kangaroo, the front paws of a money and instead of delicate and transparent ears, these were long and much more like those of a rabbit and what's more they were blue too, and violently orange-coloured on the inside."

And of course this little creation has no tail - just a button.

As the clock strikes thirteen, Manxmouse makes his getaway. He discovers his fate lies with meeting a manx cat and so his long adventures filled with interesting characters begins. He meets a movie star, an elephant in a circus, a greedy pet shop owner, a long-distance truck driver, a taxi driver, a tiger and a lonely child named Wendy H Troy. He flies on the back of a hawk who talks like the captain of a passenger jet and rescues a fox from a pack of hunting dogs. Every story feels like a wild ride and readers are sure to keep turning the pages anxious to know the outcome of meeting the fabled manx cat which you are sure to anticipate will end in disaster. 

Blurb: The brave little Manxmouse is one-of -a-kind creature on a special journey. But everyone knows who awaits him, for the Manxmouse belongs to the Manx Cat… The Manxmouse is one-of-a-kind. He’s the strangest little mouse you’ll ever see, with bright blue fur, huge rabbit ears and a distinct lack of tail. But Manxmouse doesn’t mind being different. He knows that destiny awaits him, and so Manxmouse sets out on an exciting adventure. He meets tigers and hawks and dastardly pet-shop owners, but there’s someone he dreads and desires to meet more than anyone else. The someone who has been waiting for him all along… the Manx Cat.

I think this book has stood the test of time even though it is quite a quirky tale. Children in Australia may be unfamiliar with some of the settings in London such as Madame Tussaud's wax museum. If this story was your own childhood favourite you could read it as a family read aloud - one chapter per night. 

Here is a discover - The Manx Cat is a real breed: The Manx cat is a breed of domestic cat originating on the Isle of Man. It is one of the oldest known cat breeds. The Manx is medium-sized, stocky, and heavily boned, with sloping shoulders and full chests. It has a naturally occurring mutation that shortens the tail, and can be identified as being either a rumpy, a rumpy riser, a stumpy, or a longy. 

Manx is also a Celtic language spoken on the Isle of Man. All of the UK references in this book seem a little strange to me now that I have discovered Paul Callico is from the USA.

On my recent trip to Melbourne I visited several bookshops including a few I had not seen before. One was North Melbourne Books and it had the best back list titles and eclectic collection of children's books of any store from my visit. 

Manxmouse was published in 1968. You are sure to recognise the name Paul Gallico (1879-1976) and perhaps you read others of his famous books such as The Snow Goose (1941). I didn't realise he wrote Mrs. 'Arris Goes to Paris (1958) but I did love the recent movie. He also wrote The Poseidon Adventure (1968) and again, although it was long ago, I did love the movie. Reading about Paul Gallico I was amazed to find that in 2000, J.K. Rowling declared that Gallico's Manxmouse was one of her favorite childhood books. Again, this one has a movie adaption - this time as a Japanese Anime movie Manxmouse's Great Activity (Tondemo Nezumi Daikatsuyaku). Manxmouse even has his own Wikipedia page

Here are some previous cover designs (using these to talk to students about appeal and design etc can be a powerful discussion starter).





My copy of Manxmouse is from the series Collins Modern Classics - here are a few others:





Saturday, June 10, 2023

Leeva at Last by Sara Pennypacker illustrated by Matthew Cordell



What are people for?

Okay, before I tell you about Leeva at Last, I want you to locate your own book wish list or library shopping list and add this book NOW! Readers aged 9+ will LOVE meeting Leeva and her friends and teachers are also sure to thoroughly enjoy reading this book as a class serial story - not with work sheets - just for the joy of a terrific story with that all important very happy ending. There are 54 short chapters in this book which has 300 pages set in a good size font with a sprinkling of illustrations by Matthew Cordell. Fans of Matilda will love meeting brave Leeva as will readers who enjoyed Flora and Ulysses -The illuminated adventures by Kate DiCamillo.

Leeva Thornblossom has the most despicable parents you will ever meet in a story unless you have met Matilda's parents from the famous book by Roald Dahl and also the parents from The Willoughbys by Lois Lowry but to me these parents seem even worse than all of those. Mayor Thornblossom and her husband Dolton only care about fame (that's the Mayor) and money (that's her dad). Now that Leeva is old enough she has become their slave. She cooks, cleans, mows the lawn and completes money problems for her father who is the town treasurer. These parents are so completely dreadful I can hardly begin to describe them. Here is an example showing how Leeva got her name:

Nurse Blackberry needs Mayor Thornblossom to fill in the birth certificate forms for her new baby. The Mayor has been so demanding.

"She was fed up, ready to snap. And now here she was, holding the birth certificate, asking what the new baby' name was and hearing in reply, 'Don't you know who I am? You do it, nurse!'. Well, Nurse Blackberry snapped. 'Look! The last name is filled in already: Thornblossom! All that's left is ... "first name. Middle name ... leave a space."

"Each time her parents related the story, they cackled in glee. But Leeva knew it wasn't funny. In fact, it was a pitiful thing to have been named so carelessly."

And here is how Leeva makes her own shoes from the packets which contain her father's daily food called Cheezaroni:

"Cheezaroni bore a glancing resemblance to macaroni and cheese, except that the macaroni and the cheese were indistinguishable from each other and they were both indistinguishable from the box, so even when you followed the instructions perfectly, what you ended up with was a flavourless cardboardy mash that smelt powerfully of feet."

"They were her sandals - a fairly new pair. She was proud of these shoes, which she fashioned by molding tinfoil Cheezaroini trays around her feet, then strapping them on with masking tape. In winter, she molded a second Cheezaroni tray over the top of each foot to keep the heat in. The shoes were never comfortable, and the tape left itchy bands around her ankles, but the silvery flash they made when they caught the light was lovely."

More about those parents:

"Now, Reader, Leeva had known her mother and father were liars, of course. According to the stories they told each other at night, lying was pretty much all they did in their jobs ... But it had never occurred to her that they would lie to her, their own daughter."

Her father is greedy and obsessed with making and saving money and her mother is vain, greedy and obsessed with becoming famous.

Luckily, yes there is always a luckily, next door to her house Leeva discovers a library. Harry, nephew of the librarian Mrs Pauline Flowers (yes she is just like Miss Honey) gives Leeva a precious library card and the courage to step away from her parents and all their tortuous rules. Mrs Flowers also gives Leeva perfect books, delicious cookies every day, yummy lunches and later a flask of extra cold milk. Leeva also discovers toast for the first time thanks to the kind librarian.

Things that brighten Leeva's day:

  • The daily newspaper - the Nutsmore Weekly and their word of the day. 
  • The television soap opera - The Winds of our Tides - this is where Leeva has learnt about 'real life'.
  • The program Vim and Vigor at any Age - a television exercise program
  • Cookies made by Mrs Flower - chocolate chunk with toasted hazelnuts; Champurradas from Guatemala; and many more from every country in the world
  • Wonderful library books such as Charlotte's Web; New Kid; Where the mountain meets the Moon; Bud, not Buddy; Other words for Home; One Crazy Summer; and Because of Winn Dixie.  By the end of her first week she has read 70 books!
  • Her new "pet" Bob the badger
  • Special friends - Osmund, Fern, Harry and his aunt.
There is a lot of slap-stick humour in this book BUT there are also some precious and tender moments. Leeva has never had a hug. She has never eaten hot toast with butter. She has no idea about gingersnaps. And she can only braid her her into two plaits. No mother or father have ever touched her or her hair, but she longs for a braid like her new friend Fern - a single perfect braid, with every hair in place. 

When her parents finally ban her from leaving the house ever again, Osmund arrives to find out what has happened. One lovely day some weeks ago he gave Leeva a comb - one of the first presents she had ever received.

"He pointed at the comb in Leeva's hand. 'Give it to me.' Leeva hesitated. It would hurt her to return the first thing she'd every owned all to herself. But as last she held it out. Osmund took the comb. He stood up. 'Turn around.' Although Leeva suspected Osmund would run away now, she turned around. She held her breath, waiting to hear his boots clomp out of the park. ... And then she felt him tug the rubber bands from her braids. She felt him unweave her braids and comb out her hair. She felt him divide it into three sections and lay the sections, right-over-centre, left-over-center, .... into a single braid down the middle of her back."

Read these reviews:

Splendid fun. Kirkus

Nobody’s parents are perfect, but Leeva’s are the worst. Even worse than those you might have met in Roald Dahl’s story of that long-suffering girl, Matilda.  Books for Keeps

I marvel at the variety of books written by Sara Pennypacker from the serious survival book Pax, the fun of Clementine and the powerful environmental message of Sparrow Girl.










Tuesday, November 15, 2022

While the Storm Rages by Phil Earl


It is September 1939 and Britain is on the brink of being attacked by Germany. The government declares all pets, that cannot be evacuated to the countryside, must be euthanized. So as you can see the premise of this story is based on real events.





Noah is determined to save his precious dog Winn especially since as his father left for the front line Noah made a promise to look after their dog, mum and their old boat - Queen Maudie. 

"Don't let anything happen to her, you hear? ... We've been through a lot, me and Winn. And knowing that the three of you are safe is all I'll need to keep me safe. Can you do that for me, Noah?"

Noah is also worried about his best friend Clem and her old dog Frank. Noah and Clem make a plan to save their pets by taking them to the Battersea Dogs home but when they arrive hundreds of other people are in a line ahead of them. Battersea cannot help all the pet owners but then someone in the line suggests the Duchess Nina Douglas-Hamilton lives on a large estate and she cares for animals. The directions are vague but Noah, Clem and a boy from their school named Big Col decide to set off in Queen Maudie - it might be the only way to save their precious companions.

"From what I was told she lives on some estate west of London. Big old place with huge grounds."

It's Clem who suggests this lady might be connected with royalty and that surely means she lives near Windsor. 

Along the way they pick up a donkey, two crazy kittens and they find a way to cope with Big Col who viciously taunted and belittled Noah in the past. Adding to the tension Big Col has bought along an enormous python called Delilah. And yes the name Noah is of course a perfect choice for this young boy and his boat full of animals that he knows must be rescued. 

Inspired by true events, this poignant tale is full of heart. It provides a moving insight into the everyday effects of war on young children and demonstrates the importance of compassion, friendship and determination. Beautifully balanced with moments of humour, this compelling historical novel is a joy to read. Book Trust

Here is a video where Phil Earle talks about While the Storm Rages. I picked this book out at my local bookshop because I loved a previous book by Phil Earl - When the sky Falls


While the Storm Rages moves slowly at times so readers (aged 11+) will need quite a lot of reading stamina. The final scenes are filled with action and there is that all important happy ending. I will give a warning that sensitive readers, especially those who love animals, may find some scenes in this story quite distressing. I did wish this book had come with a map so I could follow the children's journey along the Thames. 

Reviews - Books for Keeps; A Library Lady; and this very detailed one from The Kids Book Curator

Phil Earle mentions these adventure stories in his video:






The river journey (with animals) of While the Storm Rages, reminded me of this book:


Saturday, June 11, 2022

The Best Worst Day Ever by Sophy Henn


Arthur is having the absolutely worst day ever (but adding to the fun of his tantrums we never discover what exactly went wrong).  Arthur stamps and huffs and roars. He stomps and huffs and roars some more and then he decides to run away. He makes it as far as the end of the garden and then realises he is hungry but when he gets up off the grass and turns around he sees a huge forest is now blocking his way. 

"There's no time to go around it ... So I had better go through it instead."



After a while Arthur meets a bear.  It's a huge bear and he is stomping all over the place. Arthur joins in with the stomping and, in a delightful twist, the stomping turns into dancing. Next Arthur meets an elephant. The elephant is huffing and puffing so Arthur joins in and those huffs turn into a tune. 

Preschool children will enjoy the pattern of this story. The lion is roaring but when Arthur joins in the sound turns into a yodel. Together with his three new friends Arthur finds his way back home and, just like the magic of Where the Wild things are by Maurice Sendak, no time has passed and his hot dinner is waiting for him.

"In fact it was almost as if he'd never been gone."



Listen to an audio sample of The Best Worst day Ever here. Check out my previous post about Sophy Henn who makes book which are perfect for sharing with preschool children. If you are talking about emotions and anger management with an older child I also recommend How to recycle your Feelings. I also adore The Rabbit Listened.

Sophy Henn’s sweet, fun book about tantrums and how we might best work them out is a real winner. Presented in her familiar bright, bold illustrative style, readers immediately relate to Arthur, and the feeling we all get sometimes where everything gets a bit much and some time out is needed. Book Trust

Here are some other books by Sophy Henn:





Monday, March 7, 2022

The Week at World's End by Emma Carroll


There are two worlds in this book - the one the children are experiencing and the complex one adults are talking about. The year is 1962 and the big world event is the Cuban missile crisis.  World's End Close is where Stevie Fisher and her friend Ray live. Life is pretty dull according to Stevie but the one night she finds a body in the garden shed. Actually it is not a body, it is a young girl. Her name is Anna and she tells Stevie and Ray that she is on the run. That someone is trying to poison her.

There are lots of threads in this story:

Stevie's dad has recently died and by accident Stevie finds a letter written by her dad which she is supposed to read when she is older. In the letter dad reveals the terrible truth about the nuclear testing in the Pacific. 

Ray is keen to visit America to meet his cousin and talk about Martin Luther King and African American rights. Ray's mum is English and his dad is African American.

Ray and Stevie want to keep Anna safe. They want to protect her but there seems to be so much she is not telling them.

Near World's End Close there is an army installation and right now, even though the war is over, there seems to be a lot of activity, secret activity going on there.

"Today, inside the fence, there were twenty or more people walking about. They were all wearing overalls and measuring distances and writing things on clipboards.  ... In the distance, near the runway's end, the doors stood open on a row of aircraft hangers. We were too far away to see what was inside, but I could guess, and my heart thumped so hard I could feel it in my throat. American plans to drop American bombs on Russia. And if the Russians fought back, that would make the airbase here in Britain, just half a mile from where we lived, a target."

On the the cover you can see Stevie, Ray and Anna in a World War II pillbox. A pillbox is a type of blockhouse, or concrete dug-in guard-post, normally equipped with loopholes through which defenders can fire weapons. It is in effect a trench firing step, hardened to protect against small-arms fire and grenades, and raised to improve the field of fire. (WikipediaAfter all these years since the war it is over grown with grasses and plants and is very well camouflaged. 

So now the race is on to find the truth about Anna, to save her from an unknown enemy and also to hope America and Russia can resolve their differences. See what I mean about issues big and small. 

In this video Emma talks about her book. This video 9 mins will give you some good background about the historical setting used in this book. It is very clear Emma Carroll has done an enormous amount of research for this book and then she has cleverly woven in all the global story strands. Here is a BookBag review. You can read more plot details here. 

Publisher blurb: 1962, London during the Cuban Missile Crisis. What would you do if there was a real possibility that the world might end? Ray, aware of his parents' building worry, decides to take matters into his own hands. He builds a shelter in the woods behind his house in the hope that he never has to use it. Only to discover that someone else needs it more than he does. An American girl, reported missing, has turned up there... Why is she hiding? And with neighbour turning against neighbour, will Ray be willing to help her? Set over the six days when the Cuban Missile Crisis became public knowledge, this (is a) tense, (and) clever thriller.

Read my previous posts featuring books by Emma Carroll:




Wednesday, July 28, 2021

Small as an Elephant by Jennifer Richard Jacobson


Where are you from? Are you camping with your family? Where's your dad? - these are all questions Jack dreads.

Jack and his mum head off on a camping trip to Maine. They borrow the equipment they need and his mum hires a car. Mum is keen to write a list of all the things she wants to do and see in Maine. 

"These were supposed to be the best three days of his whole summer. The ones that were going to make up for the boring days he'd spent in their nothing-to-do apartment. Mom, in her exploding firecracker way had borrowed equipment, read online reviews, made lists of all the best places to visit, circled maps and even downloaded music for the car ride."

Jack joins in but when he makes suggestions of things to add to the list his mother gets mad. Jack knows he has to tread carefully. His mum has moods - highs and lows - and things can be dangerous when she is unwell. Mum has warned Jack not to tell anyone about their lives. 

"Once, Nina has asked him why he was alone so much, and he had tried to tell her - tell her about his mom's pinwheel times. How sometimes the air felt so still to her, like there wasn't any oxygen or breezes to be found. These times made his mother so prickly, she could hardly sit still."

"That's what worry did to Jack, it made him incredibly tired - tired the way his mom always was after the spinning times. She'd come home and crawl into bed, close the shades, pull up the covers, and that's where Jack would find her for days - sometimes even weeks - after a spinning time."

When Jack wakes up on the first morning of their trip the hire car is gone, his mother is gone and so is her little tent. Jack is alone and confused. The next few days will be terrible for Jack and harrowing for you, the reader, as Jack tries to find his mother, tries to stay away from the authorities and he tries to simply survive. 

Everything seems to against Jack. He accidentally swims with his phone, he breaks his little finger and is in excruciating pain and then all of his gear is stolen. Jack does need help but the warnings issued by his mother are powerful and so he keeps running and searching and trying to reach his, ever changing, destination.

"No!' he shouted. No! No! No! How could he have been so stupid? He had forgotten. Forgotten his phone was in his pocket. Forgotten and gone swimming! The phone was totally soaked. ... Totally soaked and totally dead."

"All Jack had left was a water bottle, the clothes on his back, and one small, plastic elephant."

The one thing that keeps Jack going is his desire to see a live elephant.  When he was a child he had a special experience:

"But the elephant had tapped him again and kept on tapping him until he lifted his head and looked over at her. Slowly, slowly, she'd reached out her trunk again and touched his cheek. Jack remembered giggling, remembered feeling as if the elephant tent were the safest place in the world."

If you, or your reading companion, can cope with the severe mental health issues raised in this book, then I would recommend this gripping story of survival for readers aged 11+. If you need more plot details here is a review by Book Aunt.

His love and knowledge of elephants both sustains him and pleasingly shapes the story arc. Jack’s journey to a new kind of family is inspiring and never sappy. Kirkus

I previously read two books by Jennifer Richard Jacobson -  Paper Things and The Dollar kids.


Other books which explore mental illness in a parent:














Small as an Elephant reminded me of this one also about a desperate journey.




Saturday, July 24, 2021

Running out of Night by Sharon Lovejoy

 


Publisher blurb: Every day is a misery for a nameless, motherless Southern girl who is treated cruelly by her pa and brothers. Her life changes forever when a runaway slave named Zenobia turns to her for help and shelter. Longing for her own freedom, the girl decides to run away, and she and Zenobia set off on a harrowing journey. Along the way, Zenobia names the girl Lark, after the bird, for her ability to mimic its song.  Running by night, hiding by day, the girls are pursued by Lark’s pa and brothers and by ruthless slave catchers. Brightwell, another runaway slave, joins them, and the three follow secret signs to a stop on the Underground Railroad. When the hideout is raided and Zenobia and Brightwell are captured, Lark sets out alone to rescue her friends.

Cliffhanger endings for nearly every chapter prove that adventure tropes can work just as well in historical fiction to keep the pages turning, and a happy but bittersweet conclusion ensures that both girls finally find safety. Bulletin of the Centre for Children's Books

I read this book as an ebook. It was first published in 2014 and here in Australia the paperback is nearly $25 which seems terrible to me considering this is a book with just 300 pages. I much prefer print books but the advantage of an ebook is I can highlight pieces of text to quote here which will give you a flavour of this powerful writing:

"I don't have no name. My mama died just when I were borned and nobody bothered to give me one, ceptin Grandpa, who always called me Sweet Girl when we were alone."

"I squared my chin and bit down on my tongue to keep it from waggin me into trouble again."

"I learnt a long time ago that turnin into a shadow, disappearin into whatever was round me were sometimes the only way to stay alive."

"I belonged to him, like his hunting dogs and his guns. He wouldn't never give up looking for me around here."

"Grandpa always told me that bad beginnings are a sign of a good endin. I hoped I didn't have to wait too long for a the good to come."

"And why did I have to take a beatin for someone I didn't even know, or care about? Someone who probably wouldn't give me a butter bean if I were the hungry one. Why should I risk my own hide for her?"

"Not bad enough that I'm a mite smaller than most girls, and that my ugly red hair stands out like broom corn, but now look what I were stuck with - a tall, raggedy runaway slave girl who dragged trouble behind her like a tail. We'd stick out worse n'chickens in Sunday dresses."

"What were that bird you were singin to?' 'That were a lark,' I answered. 'I be thinking on that and now I namin you Lark, ... that a name you can keep. You (are) Lark."

"I looked down. Me and Zenobia set next to each other, our arms wrapped around out legs. Her arms was the colour of dark clover honey, mine pale, white, and freckled like a wood thrush's chest. I had forgot that we was different colours."

There are some rich words in this book and I enjoyed the authentic Southern voice. I learnt these new words: scuppernong (grape); crawdad (crayfish); fetters (metal ankle chains); pinders (peanuts); buckeye (a seed); and milk name (first name given to a baby).

Here in Australia we have a weekly newspaper column penned by the radio journalist and presenter Richard Glover.  I love these quotes from his recent writings:

Saturday 24th July, 2021 "Books are best read in one or two sittings. In the before times, I could take a couple of weeks to read a book ... The plot would lose it momentum. ... A good author deserves a few hours of continuous reading."

I'm glad I read Running out of Night over two or three long and very absorbing sessions. 

Saturday 30th April, 2021 "Every book is a meeting of minds. ... Reading is an intense experience. ... The reader, after all, is the one who brings the text to life. A text without a reader, is a score without a piano. And then there’s the variation in pianos – some are out of tune, unable to even attempt the high notes; others have the ability to bring the score to tuneful life. ... Certainly, reading is not a passive activity. If the book is good, it should be transformative, leaving you slightly altered. Maybe even improved." SMH

I would add to this some wisdom (not as well expressed) about the way, as a reader, you put yourself into the hands of an author - trusting they will keep you (and their characters who may now be your friends) safe. I felt this way right through Running out of Night. So many utterly dreadful, violent, frightening, and truly terrible things happen to Lark and her new friends but I just kept hold of Sharon Lovejoy's hand, confident in the knowledge she would keep me, and those precious children, safe. 

In the author notes I discovered Sharon Lovejoy once owned a herb shop. In this book Lark uses herbs with great care and wisdom. Sharon has added her own passion to the story in a beautiful way. I recommend Running out of Night for mature readers aged 11+. 

This book reminded me of these:








I am now also keen to read Elijah of Buxton by Christopher Paul Curtis. Reviews also mention Trouble don't last by Shelley Pearsall and Stealing Freedom by Elisa Carbone.