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JESS JUST READS

A BOOK REVIEW BLOG

August 17, 2017

Team Hero 1: Battle for the Shadow Sword by Adam Blade

August 17, 2017

Welcome to Hero Academy! Join Jack and your other new classmates at this secret school, where the lessons are more exciting than Maths and PE. But when a portal from the evil underground realm of Noxx is discovered beneath the school, Team Hero needs your powers. The next invasion is upon us!

Surprisingly, I had a lot of fun reading this and I’m about twenty years older than the intended audience!

Jack Beacon is a school kid with scaly hands that he keeps hidden in gloves. His classmates tease him, until he manages to stop a moving car simply with his hands. Before he has time to work out what’s happening, a woman named Miss Steel finds Jack and brings him to Hero Academy. He joins other classmates who all have different types of powers. Here, they train and learn how to defeat the evil underground realm Noxx.

“With low mutterings, the students edged forward. Jack gasped as he saw what lay within the wall. It wasn’t a pool at all but a pit. At its base were horribly life-like statues, moss-covered and flaking. There were skeletons wielding swords and things like giant bats, wings speed as if about to fly away.”

Team Hero is actually really fun. Adam sure knows how to end each chapter with suspense and intrigue! The book is filled with illustrations, making it easy for kids to read. The chapters aren’t too long and the words aren’t too difficult. I’d say this book is perfect for kids who have just started learning to read chapter books, so age 6+

This book, with its comic-strip type illustrations, actually reminded me of a lot of animated kids shows I watched as a kid. The combination of superpowers and an academy would no doubt really draw a young reader in.

“Then Jack felt it too, through the soles of his feet — a tremor, then a rumble. Within the low stone wall, the statues began to tremble. Jack set the bike down quickly.”

Battle for the Shadow Sword is the first book in the Team Hero series. There are eight books coming out in total.

I recommend this to parents who are looking for something adventurous for their young child to read. Given that I loved reading it and I’m an adult, at least a parent would enjoy reading it to their child (after all, it’s always good if the parent actually likes the book as well as their kid).

Thank you to the publisher for sending me a copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.

Team Hero 1: Battle for the Shadow Sword
Adam Blade
July 2017
Hachette Book Publishers

Leave a Comment · Labels: 9/10, Book Reviews, Children's Fiction Tagged: book review, children, childrens book, childrens fiction

August 9, 2017

Running on the Roof of the World by Jess Butterworth

August 9, 2017

Tash has to follow many rules to survive in Tibet, a country occupied by Chinese soldiers. But when a man sets himself on fire in protest and soldiers seize Tash’s parents, she and her best friend Sam must break the rules. They are determined to escape Tibet – and seek the help of the Dalai Lama himself in India.

And so, with a backpack of Tash’s father’s mysterious papers and two trusty yaks by their side, their extraordinary journey across the mountains begins.

This is a wonderful debut novel from Jess Butterworth. Set against the backdrop of political turmoil in Tibet, Sam and Tash escape the mountains after Tash’s parents are arrested by the Chinese police. The kids are carrying a coded message from Tash’s father and the resistance, and they embark on a long, arduous journey to India in search of the Dalai Lama. Tash and Sam believe that the Dalai Lama will help Tash get his parents back.

“We move silently through the alleys, away from the patrol. My shoulders and neck ache from the weight. We pass the Yak stables. Eve sticks her head over the half-door. She watches me with her dark eyes and sniffs with her big nostrils. Her pupils are wide; she knows something is wrong. I wish I could take her with me.”

The book consists of extremely short chapters, which is perfect for kids who can’t read for too long without being distracted. There are decorative illustrations lining the pages and chapter title pages, which make it a beautiful children’s book for older middle grade readers.

“Have you had any more ideas about the code?’ I whisper to Sam.
He shakes his head.
‘Come and eat,’ says the younger man, ushering us back to the truck. I shove the letter back in my pocket.”

Jess’ prose is very choppy and abrupt, allowing the story to move forward at a fast pace and helping to keep the reader interested. It’s also very evocative writing. The sentences string together effortlessly and the dialogue is extremely realistic.

“The last row of soldiers passes and we lie and wait until they’re far enough away. I watch a spider rotating in its web from the vibrations.”

This is a children’s book that is both enjoyable and informative, allowing the reader insight into the political relations in Tibet and India. People might think this book could be a little heavy for young readers but I found it to be the opposite – Jess Butterworth has written a children’s novel where the topic is really accessible to readers. It doesn’t beat them over the head with it. At the end of the day, this is an adventure story. It may be about two children fleeing their homes in search of safety, but it’s also a tense, fast-paced adventure. And at times, there are a few mysteries involved that kids will love reading about and trying to decipher.

“I wonder just how many people are in the resistance and think about the different reasons they might have joined. I know I’m not the only one with parents in prison.”

This is a great book for kids who want adventure and journeys to read about, but also those kids who struggle to stay focused on a book and need something that doesn’t have overly long chapters. The writing is wonderful and so are the characters and the story. The beauty of the book is the simple way it tackles the topic. It certainly opened my eyes, and I imagine it would other readers as well.

Thank you to the publisher for sending me a copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.

Running on the Roof of the World
Jess Butterworth
June 2017
Hachette Book Publishers
Children’s Book for Ages 9-12

1 Comment · Labels: 8/10, Book Reviews, Children's Fiction Tagged: children, childrens books, fiction, review

August 3, 2016

REVIEW AND GIVEAWAY: Harry Potter and the Cursed Child by J.K Rowling

August 3, 2016

Harry Potter is an absolutely classic book series. It’s a wonderful world, filled with amazing characters and interesting storylines. It’s a series I can re-read many times without ever being bored, and I also always feel like I’m learning more about the world and the characters within it. I actually just recently wrote a guest blog post on this website about how I feel to re-read Harry Potter as an adult. Check it out if you’re curious.

I recently read Harry Potter and the Cursed Child, and although I was initially sceptical of it because it’s a play and it’s set so far in the future, I did thoroughly enjoy it and it was great to return to the world and find out what happened to my favourite characters from the childhood series.

The format of the book took a little time for me to get used to. It is an easy and quick read because essentially it is just dialogue that you’re reading, but you do have to concentrate on who is speaking and you have to concentrate on the physical scene descriptions to make sure you’ve picked up on everything in the story.

I loved this book. The questions that open up allow the reader to be absorbed back into that world, and through some events in the book (no spoilers!) we see some of our favourite deceased characters return, even if only temporarily. If anything, this book really made me wish that J.K Rowling started another series, either focusing on Harry’s children at school or focusing on Tom Riddle’s years in school. She is so good at plotting a story to build tension and suspense and then the book always propels you into a thrilling conclusion with many questions left unanswered.

I hope that Harry Potter and the Cursed Child isn’t the end of the Wizarding story for us diehard fans. Even though J.K didn’t write this script, she did plot the story herself and she was a part of the production of the play. It is really interesting to see what she envisioned for the characters after the conclusion of the Deathly Hallows, and I really loved the time travel in the book. It allowed the reader to go back to key moments in the series and relive them.

There are many things in the book that caused me to ask more questions, for example there’s a certain event that apparently happened just before the Battle of Hogwarts. This ‘event’ was a real surprise to me – I felt like it wasn’t forshadowed in the original series and it did seem a little odd to me in this play. Perhaps it doesn’t matter. This event propelled the whole plot in Cursed Child anyway, so it helped the story come to life and come into our hands.

I recommend this book to Harry Potter fans, and anyone who has read the original series or seen the movies. If you haven’t read the original books, I recommend you do that before picking this up. It’s not that you’ll have trouble following, because it’s a great storyline and it’s easy to read, but you won’t fully appreciate what’s going on in the book if you don’t understand it’s connection to the original books.

Thank you to Hachette for supplying me with a review copy in exchange for an honest review. I actually bought an extra copy of this book to offer as a giveaway! Feel free to enter below (AUS only).

a Rafflecopter giveaway

2 Comments · Labels: Book Reviews, Children's Fiction, Giveaways Tagged: book review, children, cursed child, giveaway, harry potter

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