Author:Eleanor Farjeon
For every day of the year Eleanor Farjeon provides a scrap of fun or fancy, poetry or nonsense, fact or fable. Here young readers can set out with Will Kemp on his nine-day dance from London to Norwich and read the lovely tale of the Seven Sleepers of Ephesus, as well as celebrate Lincoln's birthday with a poem, and Christmas with a carol.
A wonderful, timeless and utterly unique read for the whole family.
Somewhere between Pippi Longstocking and Tracy Beaker is Betsey Biggalow, who stars in these short, pacey stories, is an imaginative and enquiring girl who is sometimes mischievous but always endearing
—— GuardianSeriously scary, brilliant prose.
—— MetroPlenty of humour alongside the chills.
—— Financial TimesI’ve waited with baited breath for the second instalment of Jonathan Stroud’s Lockwood & Co novels. At last, The Whispering Skull is here and it is definitely worth the wait.
—— Scotsman Teen reviewStroud delivers another riveting narrative
—— BooklistRousing adventures for young tomb robbers and delvers into realms better left to the dead
—— KirkusThere was a fight between me and my 11-year-old about who got first to Jonathan Stroud's Whispering Skull . . . A blissful read.
—— Evening StandardAs in the first volume there are plenty of heart-stopping moments and a generous dollop of gore, but nothing most teens and confident readers can't handle: in fact, the problem will be to persuade them to put the book down. In short, it's both gross and engrossing!
—— The BookbagThe Whispering Skull frees Stroud to let his flair for spectacle run riot, resulting in several deftly constructed set-pieces far more akin to true horror than the ghost house antics of the first book.
—— StarburstAs in the first instalment, Stroud manages to perfectly balance grisly encounters with gleefully sarcastic humour.
—— Independent Children's blogThis is quality reading for young and old. Bring on those ghosts, but first hand me my rapier!
—— Ann Giles, BookwitchThere's a dark, macabre air to these books that Stroud handles with an expert touch, perfectly balancing the supernatural with witty repartee and serpentine plots (no one could ever accuse Stroud of dumbing down). After The Screaming Staircase, our trio is back with a second instalment to sort out a seriously creepy talking skull trapped inside a glass jar. Ghost-busting has never been more engrossing.
—— Dad.info BlogThe spine-tingling performance of Lyons’ narration will keep listeners on the edge of their seat.
—— YALSA committee