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The Light Thieves and the Terrifying Dawn – Blog Tour Book Series Review 

I was brand new to this series and so just as the final book in the trilogy releases I read and reviewed all three. Please feel free to only read up to where you are in the series to avoid potential spoilers when the later books are discussed. I’m going to colour coordinate the synopsis and reviews. Green for book 1, Amber for book 2, Red for book 3.  

About the Books 

The Light Thieves 

The Earth has shifted on its axis and a dark mark has appeared on the sun – the whole world is in peril! But billionaire tech genius Howard Hansom has a plan…

When Grain’s sister goes missing he’s convinced she has run off to Hansom’s new city to help save the world. But where Grain and his friends Jeffrey and Shelli track her there, they find nothing is quite as it seems. Why is everything so secret? Where is the mysterious Area 13? What does Howard Hansom want with all the people he has enticed to live in his city? 

And what’s really happening to the sun? 

The Light Thieves and the Search for the Black Mirror 

The sun’s light is being stolen. It’s a catastrophe for the planet and every living thing on it!

Friends Grian, Jeffrey and Shelli are desperately trying to work out what’s happening. They know tech genius Howard Hansom is behind the theft and they’re determined to stop him. But they can’t use any of Hansom’s smart technology in their quest as it will track them wherever they go. 

The three young heroes need to find a strange black mirror to help them save the sun. 

Time is running out. Can kids really save the world? 

The Light Thieves and the Terrifying Dawn 

The third and final action-packed eco-techno-adventure in The Light Thieves series from Helena Duggan, bestselling author of A Place Called Perfect.

 

People know that the sun is being stolen by tech-billionaire Howard Hansom, who’s been spinning everyone a massive lie.

 

The only person who can stop him from plunging the world into darkness is the mysterious White Rose. She must keep her identity a secret, so she’s been sending out coded letters hoping good people will find them and work out what’s going on. Young heroes, Grian, Shelli and Jeffrey have been deciphering her letters and are close to solving all the puzzles. But they need one more set of clues to help them in their quest.

Can they find the White Rose before it’s too late?

About the Author 

Helena Duggan is a children’s author, graphic designer and illustrator from Kilkenny, a medieval town in Ireland, which was the inspiration for A Place Called Perfect. She writes in a treehouse built by her husband Robbie and his brother in the bottom of their garden. She lives in a small house with Robbie, their daughters Jo and Bobbie and dog Tinker.

 

Instagram: https://instagram.com/helenadugganwrites

X: https://x.com/heldideas

What I Thought 

The Light Thieves 

Wow. This really was a rip roaring introduction to this adventure. From the world tilting prologue – literally- to the “what comes next” ending The Light Thieves was such an exciting read. 

The tag line is – Who would you trust to save the world, a boy or a billionaire? – I think most of us know the answer to this is the boy. Otherwise most of the world’s problems would already be solved if it was the one who actually already has access to resources! 

Our main protagonist Grian gets catapulted into adventure when his sister Solas decides to volunteer to enter The Tipping Point (a new city trying to create a critical mass of people to tip the world back onto its axis) and when his grandad subsequently also goes missing trying to locate her. With their parents away Grian has no choice other than to try and discover what has happened – whilst avoiding the creepy hovering and cloaked Proctors who try to invade his home. 

Grian starts the story friendless and at times somewhat embarrassed by his family. His sister doesn’t want to be seen near him, he doesn’t want people to know his granddad is a tilt denier and – how is his dad still a postman in this age of technological advancement? He does have a constant companion though. His Hansom smart watch he calls Bob.

Thrust into his neighbour’s backyard it turns out Jeffrey, as well as being very geeky, is also very handy to have around when technology hacking is needed. Both of them get chased out to the Wilde where eco warriors live and again – despite initial misjudgments against her – Shelli and her fox friend Nach balances out their trio with her connection with nature. Grian realises his grandad has taught him a skill that will come in super handy – how to solve complex puzzles and riddles. 

Infiltrating The Tipping Point is not easy, especially when its creator  Howard Hansom is perhaps not what he seems. If Utopia is promised is it ever likely to be real? 

Here they uncover a number of nefarious plots by using  the advanced technologies designed by the very evil billionaire they are trying to escape. Shelli’s animal whispering skills are also essential for finding Grian’s sister and Grandad? 

The Light Thieves and the search for the Black Mirror 

Just as good as book one. We delve much more into the Wilde and with our trio being public enemies nos 1-3 technology – which has tracking capabilities – is a big no no. Shelli’s skills come to the fore in this book but I really enjoyed how each of the three characters has their own way of contributing that makes the combination of them working together so much more powerful. 

There’s a couple of new characters introduced and I was a big fan of Mushka (who reminded me of a fave character in Gemina). With Mushka’s help we get an awesome heist sequence. We also get introduced to the Council of Colour, The Postal Service and the Riders of the Apocalypse motorcycle gang and there is a desperate search for letters that each contain a riddle that will lead them to knowing how to save the sun. 

Evil billionaire Howard has made the world think he died but where would the peril be if that were true? 

I love how all the plot pieces are coming together just as more power is leeched from the sun, we very much have a time restriction driving the action forward. 

A gold star goes to the postal service scenes for giving  me Terry Pratchett Going Postal vibes. 

The Light Thieves and the Terrifying Dawn 

Things I wanted to see in book 3:

To find out what happened with Shelli’s mum. 

For the three sisters to come together. 

For Grian to save his grandad. 

To have some sort of resolution with Jeffrey’s family – poor lamb. 

For Howard Hansom to be overcome by the power of nature (that can be in a good or a tragic way). 

I’m not actually going to tell you if any of that happened but I will say this is an excellent conclusion to the series. The tension increases because the trio are trapped under a dome in Quantum searching for the author of the riddles The White Rose. But once the sun extinguishes under the dome will be the only habitable place on earth. Where are the rest of their families? Can they find the White Rose, solve the riddles and save everyone. 

Howard Hansom is a super baddie, some of the scenes with the volunteers are very eerie and of course he only values the lives of the rich and famous. 

Although this series very much provides a social commentary – because the messages are so tied up in the plot it doesn’t feel like it’s done in a heavy handed way. Themes of climate change/technology/love and family make this conclusion both thrilling and emotional. 

I have had the first book from the author’s first MG series on my TBR for too long and reading this has definitely pushed it up because I know I will be in safe hands. 

But is the earth saved by Grian, Shelli, Jeffrey and Mushka. Should children have to deal with the mess that adults make at all? Personally I’d love to gift this series to quite a few adult readers!! 

A huge thanks to Bee at Kaleidoscopic tours and the publisher Usborne for the gifted copies. This wasn’t a series that was on my radar but I hope my honest review means that it is now on yours. 

Do check out the rest of the tour – book 3 is out soon, on 12th September. 

Witchstorm by Tim Tilley – Blog Tour Book Review

About the Book

Join a hunt for lost witch treasure, in an enchanting adventure story of storms, spells, and the magic of the natural world, from bestselling and award-winning Tim Tilley.


Will believes in witches and the stories he’s grown up with – of mythical storm-lions, disappearing villages, and secret songs. Most of all, he believes the tales of magical treasure hidden in the Fens centuries ago. Treasure that he has to find, to solve the mystery of his Ma’s disappearance.


Then, in the eye of a storm, a witch arrives. She holds the key to finding the lost treasure – a powerful magical object that can summon storms. But someone else is searching for it too. If it falls into the wrong hands, Will’s beloved home could be destroyed, and with it, his chances of ever finding his ma.


Join Will on an epic quest filled with riddles, ruined towers, cloud cities and broomstick chases, on a journey to save everything he loves before time runs out.

About the Author

Tim Tilley studied illustration at Anglia Ruskin University and now teaches children’s book illustration courses at City Lit. He is always watchful of the world around him and loves collecting and drawing beautiful snapshots of nature, relishing the small things people often miss. Tim’s debut children’s book, the bestselling and critically-acclaimed Harklights, is the winner of the Joan Aiken Future Classics Prize and the Junior Design Award.

Twitter: http://twitter.com/timbertilley

Instagram: http://instagram.com/timbertilleytales

What I Thought

To me this was a pacy, Witchy Indiana Jones with Ecological themes. Full of action and adventure this does roll along at breakbroom speed. 

Our protagonist Will is distressed by his mother’s disappearance and wonders if, the family legend about ‘that time their ancestor saved a witch’, has anything to do with it. Spending his days searching for her he’s lost touch with one of his friends and Fa never believed in witches anyway.

I couldn’t quite place this originally thinking it was a contemporary urban fantasy but I think it’s more an alternative and older version of our world and one that isn’t as technological. 

Humans are referred to by witches as Grounders – which does make sense later on. Not only is there a history of witch trials, grounders are now pillaging the earth. Taking but not giving back. No balance or care. This leads one witch to want to do something about it, except he’s prepared to sacrifice others to achieve this. 

Will’s Cool Aunt Hera is the Indiana Jones esque archaeologist and I very much pictured her as an Amelia Earhart lookalike but in a motorcar rather than a plane – oh yeah and she has a sword!

Witch coven leader in training Magda literally crashes into their lives and we barely get a breath as not only do they have to try and save both Will and Magda’s mother but also the witch and grounder communities, the former literally falling to pieces and the latter on the precipice of a severe storm. There’s also a theme around gaining inner confidence in order to focus and control magic and the support the young characters give each other is heartwarming – even when it comes to saving Will’s bully. 

I would say that this felt at the younger age of middle grade with the peril being tamer than for a slightly older audience. However, the search for Agatha Crow’s amulet’s Ruby was the most enjoyable part of this and I particularly loved the riddles and booby traps they had to get through. There’s even a touch of the mind control we see in Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom. 

The ecological message is returned to at the end and I’m not sure if something that happens towards the end hints at a potential sequel. 

A huge thanks to Bee at Kaleidoscopic Tours and Usborne for the gifted ARC copy. As ever all opinions are my own. Follow along with the blogtour by using the hashtag #Witchstorm.

The Inventory: Gravity by Andy Briggs – Blog Tour

Earlier this year I was lucky enough to receive a copy of Iron Fist – the first in Andy Briggs’  The Inventory series, about a top secret vault that contains banned gadgets that are too dangerous to be in the world. You can see my interview with author Andy Briggs here.

Book two of the series Gravity is already here and having enjoyed the first book I was eager to read more about Dev and his friend Lot and Mason’s adventures.

gravityGoodreads link

Summary

Eeek! Think that’s a monster? Nope: it’s a person. What terrible weapon could do this…? Errr – well, that used to be top-secret. Problem: it’s not quite so secret anymore. Dev messed up big time the day he let the ruthless Shadow Helix gang into the Inventory. What is the Inventory, we hear you ask? Well, it’s the secret lockup for all the deadly battle tech the world is NOT ready for. Which is why letting it get nicked was a REALLY BAD IDEA. Now the Shadow Helix have Newton’s Arrow: a terrifying weapon that messes with gravity, causing … well, you get the picture from this book’s cover. Dev and his mates HAVE to get it back – even if it means crossing the entire globe. To stop this evil, no trip is too far!

Author

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Andy Briggs is a screenwriter, producer and author of the Hero.com, Villain.net and Tarzan series. Andy has worked on film development for Paramount and Warner Bros, as well as working with Marvel Comics legend Stan Lee and producer Robert Evans. With a strong social media following, Andy tours the UK regularly, doing festival, school and library events.

Website: www.andybriggs.co.uk

Twitter: www.twitter.com/aBriggswriter

 

What I Thought?

After the big reveal at the end of the first book Andy Briggs catapults Dev and his friends straight into the action with the aim of retrieving the missing tech stolen from the vault. It’s really not long before the three teens are out on their own facing evil foes half way across the world. I enjoyed that this fact was poked fun out of in the book, although it definitely made the adult characters, particularly Charles Parker, less sympathetic.

Dev reminded me of Book 5 Harry in this story and he certainly has some big issues to deal with, which makes him the main focus of this story. The parallel between him and some of the other characters is explored well.

There is more fun technology and science to explore and the plot is certainly action packed. For me, I would have liked a few more quieter moments and perhaps a bit more exploration of Lot and Mason’s characters, although they both get their own kick-ass moments.

This is a really fun series that I’m looking forward to keeping up with and continue to recommend. It is very visual and I’d love to see it as a TV series and/or Graphic Novel.

Blog Tour

My stop is the last on the blog tour but you can check out the other stops for more reviews and features.

gravity-blog-tour

Thanks to Scholastic for the free copy – all opinions are my own.

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