Showing posts with label meg rosoff. Show all posts
Showing posts with label meg rosoff. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Jumpy Jack & Googily by Meg Rosoff & Sophie Blackall

It is that time of year again when I start stressing about what to buy my god-daughters for Christmas.  Last year I inundated them with Charlie and Lola stuff which I loved myself.  I also bought them Aliens love Underpants because frankly, well - a cool idea is a cool idea paired with some hilarious writing.

I've been collecting picture books this past year and will be doing some random reviews in the run up to Christmas.  And erm, of course I bought these as research and gifts for my god-daughters.  *I'm lying, can you tell?*

First up in this sequence of reviews is the very quirky and funny Jumpy Jack & Googily by Meg Rosoff and Sophie Blackall.  Jumpy Jack is the snail of the pair and he is really quite scared of monsters.  He has a bit of a phobia about them.  I wonder if he's ever taken a good look at Googily?  Googily is a two fingered blue monster, with buggy out eyes, sticky out teeth and he wears a bowler hat.  I mean - Jumpy Jack!  You are incredibly brave and not at all a scaredy cat!

But Jumpy Jack (best name ever for a snail, I think) and Googily are the best of friends and Googily looks after Jumpy Jack on their strolls about, making sure that there are no monsters in the pool, behind the tree, or the inside the postbox or behind the door. All is well that ends well.  The lights go off and Googily's tiny voice comes on, asking Jumpy Jack to please help him this time around.  He's scared of socks, of all things, and needs Jumpy Jack to check under the bed as he's sure he can hear a sock squeaking.  I know the feeling Googily, I know the feeling!

A clever story, wonderfully illustrated by Sophie Blackall in these understated tones, that made me smile and giggle.  It's the silliness of it all but also the sweet friendship and the fact that they rely on each other, not just Jumpy Jack on Googily.

A great treat for readers 4 - 7.

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

The Bride's Farewell by Meg Rosoff


Synopsis


On the morning of her wedding, Pell Ridley creeps out of bed in the dark, kisses her sisters goodbye and flees - determined to escape a future that offers nothing but hard work and sorrow.


She takes the only thing that truly belongs to her: Jack, a white horse, and her little brother, Bean, unexpectedly decides to join the runaway pair. The road ahead is rich with longing, silence and secrets, and each encounter leads her closer to the untold story of her past. Then Pell meets a hunter, infuriating, mysterious and cold. Will he help her to find what she seeks? With all the hallmarks of Meg Rosoff's extraordinary writing, The Bride's Farewell also breaks new ground for this author, in a nineteenth century, Hardyesque setting. This is a moving story of love and lost things, with a core of deep, beautiful romance.


If you are a fan of Meg Rosoff you are in for a treat reading The Bride's Farewell. Richly evocative and haunting, her writing is pure magic to read. And reading it out loud, which I did whilst at home yesterday, makes the story come to life, giving it an extra dimension.


Very few authors can get away writing intimately about a character's inner dialogue and successfully adapt an overall narrative voice that is gripping enough to keep you focussed.


Following Pell's adventures and mishaps throughout the book you are struck by the almost picturesque poverty she encounters in her wanderings around the south of England. It is never glorified or looked at through rose coloured glasses, but the subtlety she employs to show average people struggling to survive serves to shock nonetheless.


I enjoyed Pell's headstrong ways - a very together girl in a very big world, deciding to follow her own head and not to submit to convention. She stays close to her little brother Bean who had snuck off with her. Bean remains an enigma - he is mute but not stupid and has an easy way with animals. Pell is horsewhisperer and instinctively knows things about these animals and proves her affinity for them several times throughout the novel. She makes her solitary way down to Salisbury where she hopes to find work as a groom any other job that involves her working with horses, as that is what she knows best. She arrives at the time of one of the big horse fairs and meets a variety of people, including a gypsy family whom she falls in with for a few days.


The story defies pigeonholing and I am hesitant to go into further detail but let's just say that Pell loses some things close to her and it drives her forward - not only does she have to find somewhere to live and work in order not to starve, she has to discover what has happened to these two precious things that have been taken from her.


The story is a quick but beautiful read - wonderfully descriptive and touching. I would heartily recommend this to all existing readers of Meg Rosoff's books but would also invite readers who have not yet given her a try to pick this up as a perfect introduction to her wonderful writing.


The Bride's Farewell is out on 3rd September from Puffin. And although it is aimed at young adults it has great cross-over appeal and will no doubt garner more praise to this amazing writer's name.