Category Archives: Reviews

#GeekGirl by Holly Smale – Series and Ultimate Party Review

Geek Girl jackets - FULL SERIES

Following on from the guest post from Holly, as part of the Forever Geek blog tour on Wednesday, I have decided to do an overview of the entire series, a rundown of the characters and some highlights of the Ultimate Geek Girl Party. Please read with caution because there may be some SPOILERS included though I’ve tried not to give major spoilers, especially not for the final book.

Way back when I also interviewed Holly about her geekiest traits so do take a look back.

The entire series were 5 out 5 star reads for me and Holly has a beautiful and easy to read writing style with a strong voice. Geek Girl is about family, friendship, being flawed, it’s funny, fantastic and familiar (Reading about Harriet feels like coming home and I love the Harry Potter and book references throughout).

Book Main Setting/Modelling Assignment Synopsis My Thoughts
Geek Girl (#1) The Clothes Show Live – Birmingham – being spotted

 

Moscow – Russia – Baylee shoot and runway show

Harriet is discovered by the fashion world – and us. The message – that it’s ok to be yourself.

Check out my full review here

All Wrapped Up (#1.5) London – Ice-skating

 

 

PE class – Netball

How to handle a first date.

 

Also includes some bonus Christmas themed features and the short – Team Geek

Short, sweet, romantic in a geeky way. Christmassy. Loved it.

 

Check out my full review here.

Model Misfit #2 Perfume shoot

 

Tokyo – Japan – new label campaign – with co-model Charlie the octopus and Sumo, Manga Arcade Game and Mount Fuji.

Harriet is due to be a big sister, and with all attention on the baby, Natalie sent away for the summer and a lack of Lion Boy! Harriet jumps at the chance to head to Tokyo with her grandmother Bunty as “chaperone”.

 

My favourite character, Toby – Harriet’s stalker, reduced me to tears in one scene, and I nearly hugged myself because of ‘all the feels’.

 

Check out my full review here.

Geek Drama #2.5 Infinity Models London – Brink Magazine Casting and Shoot

 

Drama – Hamlet auditions

Short story published for #WorldBookDay in which Harriet gets persuaded to audition for the school play (set in the middle of Model Misfit). A fun school based short story where we get to learn more about Harriet and her classmates.

Holly gets to share her love of Shakespeare with us.

Picture Perfect #3 New York – LA MODE magazine spread at a fairground

 

Party at Gotham Hall

On exams results, moving away, governesses, turning sweet sixteen, and long distance relationships.

 

Harriet navigates America and the modelling world. A more gently paced story, apart from the rollercoaster, but still the same loveable Harriet. I like the exploration of the family relationships.
All That Glitters #4 Back Home in Hertfordshire – Mount Fuji shots released.

Marrakech, Morocco – Levaire jewellery commercial with Richard!, and Dancing in the Sahara Desert.

Party – Night of Stars

On starting sixth form, stardom, bullying and friendship. Annabel accompanies Harriet on her trip. So emotional. I wanted to protect Harriet all the way through this one. Alexa is at it again. Totally empathise with her diving into books as a solace.
Sunny Side Up #4.5 France – Paris Fashion Week

 

Fashion yacht party

 

Gothic Catacomb fashion show

 

Animal Catwalk

 

Novella length story where Harriet joins Paris Fashion Week but is she in the City of Lights, or in the Dark?

 

In the short scene we get to meet our characters through Nick’s POV.

Love this book. Favourite fashion scenes yet. Most embarrassing disaster??

 

The short excerpt was great and I laughed out loud at Nick’s ‘Intro to Toby’.

Head Over Heels #5 London – New modelling agency castings

 

How to Be a Perfect Model Training

 

London – Lucky 7 castings??

 

British Vogue Sisters Shoot

 

India – Fizzy Drink Campaign

 

This time she’s got a foolproof plan and a social team. Hasn’t she?

 

Harriet switches roles and aims to be Wilbur’s fairy godmother.

 

 

 

I love re-entering Harriet’s world and really enjoy seeing all the unreliable threads come together. It’s great fun being ahead of her.
Forever Geek #6 Sydney, Australia – MAKE NAT A FASHION ICON

 

Impromptu casting and The Great Barrier Reef

 

Sydney Australia For Yuko’s The Show To End All Shows

 

 

Nat and Harriet head down under with Bunty.

Will Harriet end up with Nick or Jasper and when will her transformation from Geek to Model be complete?

 

Will we have a happy ending even though we have to say goodbye?

This book made me cry. Perfect Conclusion. NO SPOILERS for this one – just enjoy the finale.

Main Characters

Harriet Manners – knower of lots of facts turned model – the titular Geek Girl and my favourite unreliable narrator.

Natalie “Nat” Grey – the best friend, wannabe model and fashion fan/designer – part of Team JINTH

Toby Pilgrim – Harriet’s Stalker and Fellow Geek – part of Team JINTH

Nick Hidaka/Lion Boy – love interest and male model, met under a table

Alexa Roberts – Harriet’s school-based nemesis

Wilbur “not iam”  – modelling agent and inventor of the most fun descriptors

Yuko Ito – fashion designer who gives Harriet her big break, and Nick’s Aunty.

Richard Manners – Harriet’s Dad, works in advertising – witty

Annabel Manners – Harriet’s Stepmother, a lawyer – wise

Bunty Brown – Harriet’s Step-Grandmother, a loose cannon if ever there was one

Tabitha Manners – Harriet’s Baby Sister

Hugo and Victor – Manners family dog and cat

Fleur – model Harriet has a run-in with – literally in Russia, America and the final book.

Rin – Japanese model and friend

Kenderall/Siren – model and miniature pig owner

India Perez – new girl to Head Girl – part of Team JINTH

Jasper King –foe to part of Team JINTH and love interest

ForeverGeek

So it is time for Harriet to hang up her Geek Girl glasses (for now at least) so I’m now planning a re-read (and have recently listened to the first two books on audio as well – great narration by Katy Sobey). I’m going to aim to note down Harriet and Toby’s outfits and Wilbur’s isms. If you’d like me to share let me know.

Ultimate Geek Girl Party – 4th March

I was very honoured to get an invite to the party especially because the launch of Geek Girl was my first ever Blogger event. It appears that Holly’s book parties seem to have a need for fancy lighting. Check out my post on the blogger launch of Geek Girl, and do take a look at my instagram photos posted today in celebration. I’ll always remember her swamped by that enormous squashy chair. For the Ultimate Party we had cupcakes, mocktails, face paints and nails. Holly spoke about the series, got understandably emotional and gave us a reading from Forever Geek. We were each given a goodie bag including tote, bookmark, sweets, signed copy of the final book and a copy of the first book to pass on. I got mine signed and gave it to a young girl on the tube – and it turned out to be her birthday. Hope she loves it as much as I did.

Here’s highlights of the notes I took from Holly’s speech:

DSC_2927

Harriet isn’t Holly but there are certain aspects of Holly’s life that have influenced the books. In fact the whole series was written as part of a dare to write about her experience of being a teenage model. Holly wrote the first sentence and got shivers. Huge thanks go out to that friend!

The part where Alexa says ‘hands up who hates Harriet’ happened, modelling didn’t transform Holly. Richard is actually based on her dad (and as a side note her grandad is the biggest geek she knows).

This is a book about being an outsider but by sharing it Holly was surprised and honoured to find people identified with Harriet. She has met amazing, brilliant and unique girls who understand and empathise with her character and who have ‘blown her away’.

Originally Geek Girl was going to be a stand alone, and the end of book 6 was going to be the end of book 1. Thanks to a wise editor suggesting a series would be possible we are a few books better off than we would have been. Holly has had 9 years of writing, loving and living with Harriet Manners, she feels like a little sister, precious, brave, silly but also selfish and does stupid things. Her advice to Harriet is the series, but also to keep growing and looking around you. Sad to say goodbye (cried through about a third of the final book) but she’s off to sleep now. Well, actually she’s off to China. And Holly has not completely closed the cover – she may return, in the future, if it seems right.

There are hopes for Geek Girl to be filmed and Holly is working on a script, however the concept has to be right, and Holly is passionate about keeping the essential British schoolgirl nature of Harriet. She thinks a Netflix series would be good – maybe we should tweet Netflix with the hint.

What Holly would say about her next series is that it will be a comedy about more than one girl. I know I’m going to be reading it.

The Geek Girls’ thanks to Holly

Finally, here is a picture of Holly and I, I decided to turn the tables and go as Toby’s Stalker complete with binoculars and flask. And why is there a polar bear on my T-shirt? You’ll have to read the books to find out.

TPFC

Harriet’s Facts – #ForeverGeek Blog Tour

The White Hare by Michael Fishwick – Blog Tour (Guest Post)

I’m very pleased to introduce The White Hare, and Zephyr to you today. The White Hare by Michael Fishwick is the launch title for Head of Zeus new children’s imprint, Zephyr.

This beautiful hardback book is a lyrically mythical delight. Michael Fishwick, already the author of two novels, Smashing People and Sacrifices has kindly written a guest post on dealing with death in children’s books.

WH cover

Robbie doesn’t want anything more to do with death, but life in a village full of whispers and secrets can’t make things the way they were.

When the white hare appears, magical and fleet in the silvery moonlight, she leads them all into a legend, a chase, a hunt.

But who is the hunter and who the hunted?

Strangely, both my first two novels began with a death, and I’m not entirely sure why. I remember showing the opening pages to my wife, because I was worried her father, who seemed old then, to me, might die as I wrote the book and I didn’t want to jinx it, or him. As it turns out, he’s still very much alive at ninety-six, though sadly my own parents died as I wrote The White Hare, something that took me years to address and some of the effects of which worked their way into Robbie’s own experiences.

When I write I don’t have a target reader in mind. I want you, the reader, to be drawn in and entranced, held captive by the fiction, and I want to create a reliable and absorbing texture. What interests me, above all else, is how we experience our lives as human beings. For me, both in my day job as a publisher and as a fiction author, writing is part of a journey to understand and as importantly feel what those experiences are all about.

In Robbie’s case, I wanted to develop a vibrant and suffering voice, one that is experiencing adversity and facing up to it. I wish that when I was being bullied at school I could have responded with the tough, leathery bravado that Robbie does. Once, I was in the local library and I was just leaving the children’s bit to find my dad on the other side of the building in the adult bit (this was in Dulwich, south London) when some boy who seemed twice my height took my books and put them on top of a van where I couldn’t reach them. He then asked what I was going to do about it. I stood there, my eyes on a level with his stomach, and I knew what I should do, I should drive my fist into his stomach as hard as I could; but I quailed, and ran. My little brother had seen what was going on and scooted ahead, so I found my dad belting out of the library towards me. I’ve never seen anyone box anyone’s ears before or since, but that’s what he did to the bully.

So when thinking about Robbie and his mother’s death I really wanted to get the essence of the relationships and the emotions. A lot was based on my own childhood in south London; my parents then went abroad and I was sent to boarding school, and at the age of fourteen was hauled into my housemaster’s study to be told my beloved aunt had died of cancer. I was fourteen. I had no idea how to respond; I had enough on my plate with the bullying. She was witty and kind and read PG Wodehouse and made me sandwiches with very thin bread when she took me out of school and we sat under the lamplights on Clapham Common in her dark green mini before she took me back. With Robbie, his response was to go wild and burn things; it’s all about anger, an emotion that fascinates me. At that age I think death is incomprehensible. I remember realizing that I would die, again at boarding school with no one to turn to, when I was about twelve. So I just didn’t think about it for a long time. But when writing about Robbie I wanted to get down the essence of the experience on paper. With Fran, who chooses it, it seemed a natural part of the white hare legend, and here I wanted to write about the ruthless brutality of love in one of its aspects (in another it is kind and forgiving, of course). When someone chooses to kill themselves, some react with horror and a lack of forgiveness, but I think of the depth of sorrow and madness and churning feelings that make you not want to exist anymore.

What I am really trying to do in The White Hare is through imagination and empathy find a way of confronting and defying the reality of death, and that whole process begins for all of us in childhood.

 

 

My Thoughts

I really enjoyed this story and oddly it reminded me of Watership Down and the film Lady in White in its tonal quality. The image below, a sentence about tears, shows a flavour of the beautiful writing in this book. I would describe the genre as magical realism because it is through the supernatural and mythical elements that Robbie, his friend Mags, his father, and the reader learn more about, and begin to deal with the nature of death. I think I might need to re-read to fully appreciate all the nuances. I liked how Robbie is just friends with two girls and it was refreshing for romance not to be a main element. I also felt the rural and seasonal setting added an certain innocence to which the violent episodes in the book was in stark contrast. It’s interesting to see the author write about his personal experience of bullying and then how that is played out in the book (I’m not sure I entirely agree with the method Robbie uses on occasion). I could really see this as a Sunday afternoon BBC family series, in the vein of Moondial. Gosh this book is bringing back memories. If you like your stories lilting and poetic do give this one a read.

Tears

Huge thanks goes to Blake at Head of Zeus for the copy and to Michael for sharing this story. My opinions are, as ever, my own. Please do check out the tour banner below and head along to the other stops to learn more about The White Hare. I look forward to seeing what other books Zephyr has to offer.

WHITE HARE