Author:Mur Lafferty
The brand-new official Minecraft novel is a journey into the unknown! When a young girl teams up with her friend to find the boy’s missing uncle, they must leave the safety of the Overworld behind.
Alison and Max must team up to find his missing uncle Nicholas. Using the journal his beloved uncle left as a guide, the duo hurtle headlong into a treacherous and unknown landscape called the Nether. There, they meet a strange girl named Freya and her woefully unheroic dog, Bunny Biter, who agree to help them in their quest. The group must take on dangerous new foes and unravel the cryptic journal to find Nicholas and reunite this fractured family.
It’s impossible to put down: devastating and devastatingly good, one of my top three children’s novels of the year so far . . . A difficult story to pull off, but with his perfect pacing, lack of sentimentality and refusal to submit to a neat end, Boyne has won me over – all over again
—— The TimesA remarkable feat . . . Compelling
—— GuardianDisturbingly vivid, utterly readable and appealing to audiences of all ages
—— The BookbagThere is a sureness and a simplicity to the writing that is very impressive . . . In The Boy at the Top of the Mountain, Boyne has delivered a powerful account of how one boy was seduced by Hitler and Nazism and paid the price. The final pages, in which he meets the Jewish friend of his boyhood and seeks redemption, are very moving. Younger readers will lament the corruption of Pierrot; older ones will perceive what Boyne is trying to tell us: if this could happen to Pierrot, it could happen to us
—— Irish IndependentAn affecting morality tale . . . It is the chilling portrayal of adolescent corruption and atonement that lingers
—— Daily MailForceful . . . Reminding us that silence and compromise can foster their own overwhelming guilt
—— AustralianExciting and thought-provoking . . . An excellent novel
—— Star, MalaysiaWith his perfect pacing, lack of sentimentality and refusal to submit to a neat end, Boyne has written one of the children’s books of the year
—— The TimesA powerful new novel from the author of the highly acclaimed The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas, and it is equally atmospheric and disturbing . . . Mesmerizing
—— Parents in TouchAnother winner
—— Glasgow Sunday HeraldCompelling and thought-provoking
—— Teach Primary