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Finding Phoebe by Gavin Extence – Blog Tour Book Review

About the Book

Phoebe is autistic. She prefers to stay in her comfort zone: walking her dog, writing fantasy fiction, surviving school with as few incidents as possible.

When her best (and only) friend rebels and gets a secret boyfriend, Phoebe reluctantly agrees to cover for her. Before long, Phoebe’s dealing with all sorts of things she’d rather not, like deception, fashionable jackets, and the bewildering politics of the school chess club. Breaking the rules has never been Phoebe’s thing, but as events take a seriously unexpected turn, she realises there’s more to her than she ever imagined . . .

(Please note at the end of my review I have added some trigger warnings but some may be considered spoilers) 

About the Author

Gavin Extence was born in 1982 and grew up in the interestingly named village of Swineshead, Lincolnshire. From the ages of 5-11, he enjoyed a brief but illustrious career as a chess player, winning numerous national championships and travelling to Moscow and St Petersburg to pit his wits against the finest young minds in Russia. He won only one game.

Gavin is currently working on his second novel. When he is not writing, he enjoys cooking, amateur astronomy and going to Alton Towers.

Twitter: http://twitter.com/gavinextence 

 

What I Thought

First up I loved Phoebe’s voice. Her character practically leaps off the page, after slowly and methodically planning the leap of course!

Phoebe is autistic and in the author’s acknowledgment at the end he tells us he wrote this book for his autistic daughter. I would love to read some reviews from #actuallyautistic readers to see how they viewed the representation but I felt it was  nuanced and respectful.

Phoebe is a very forthright character and I really enjoyed how we see her using tools at home to self regulate and how she already knows and understands both her autism and her own needs. She likes a routine, she likes things to be logical and she doesn’t always understand what people mean but that doesn’t make her naive or inept, it makes her thoughtful and analytical. She knows when she doesn’t get something and this does become a source of concern for her at times. 

Phoebe also knows her own mind, she knows what she wants out of life but she does go through a slightly misguided period of creating her own social improvement plan. Sometimes the plan helps, sometimes it doesn’t, but it does introduce chess club to her life so she doesn’t just have to play against her phone (although I think she finds that preferable to be honest). 

Of course there are a few arguments between her and her best friend Bethany when Phoebe doesn’t catch on as quickly to what is going on with Bethany (they are teenage girls after all). But on the whole I think Bethany is an example of a good friend who accepts and respects Phoebe for who she is, as Phoebe does in return for her. It feels like very much a reciprocal friendship. 

Phoebe’s relationship with Bethany is one of the stable things in her routine – that is until Will comes along to rock the boat. And boy does he make the sea choppy. There was a scene toward the end that surprised me at the time although when thinking back the author had added subtle cues to this development. I also both did and didn’t enjoy Phoebe’s interactions with Bethany’s very religious parents and admire her later interactions with them in trying to be a good friend and make Bethany’s life better. 

Phoebe narrates the book to her mum who has died, and who also had ME while she was alive, and this adds a nuance that Phoebe is also facing all these challenges growing up without a female figure to guide her, although she still has a very supportive dad. During the book Phoebe and her friend are in the last year of GCSEs and have to do work experience. Phoebe wants to be a writer and manages to arrange some time with the small town’s reclusive poet. There was definitely some humour in these scenes and although used as a mentor figure, Mrs Frost (also autistic coded) is most definitely not a mother figure. I also enjoyed all the bookish references and it turn out I have very similar taste to Phoebe and have added a couple more books to my TBR as a result. 

Boys aren’t the only thing that disrupt Phoebe’s worldview and I’m glad that this meant we got a chance to meet her grandmother as early mentions of her had me liking her and wanting to know more about their relationship. 

“Furthermore, it turned out that I could cope in a crisis, just as long as it wasn’t my crisis.” 

I related to this quote so hard although I think Phoebe actually handled her own crisis better than I would – I would just sit in a corner and sob even at nearly 45! 

The setting of the book was so interesting too. They live in a small island town of 160 which sometimes gets cut off with the tide from where they go to school and so Bethany and Phoebe board together at the school part time. No Malory Towers style midnight feasts here although a late night sneaking out does occur.  

Overall I found this thought provoking, warm and a wonderful exploration of teen female friendship. If you read this I think that like Bethany, you’d come to realise – who wouldn’t want a Phoebe in their corner?

Trigger Warnings Below (May Be Considered Spoilers)

Teen Pregnancy and Abortion, Death of a Parent, Cancer, Ableism, Homophobia, Extra marital affair, Religious Trauma, Loss of Faith

Huge thanks to Bee at Kaleidoscopic Tours and the Publisher Anderson Press for the gifted copy. This review is my honest opinion. Do check out the rest of the tour stops to see what everyone else thought too.

The Boy Who Made Monsters by Jenny Pearson – Blog Tour Book Review

About the Book

There are a lot of different types of monster. Some live at the bottom of lochs, some are found far out at sea and some swim about in the depths of your mind and these can be the scariest monsters of all – if you let them.

Benji McLaughlin is a visionary. He believes in things that other people think are impossible, like that he and his brother Stanley will be happy in their new home in Scotland, and that the Loch Lochy monster exists, and that his parents will come home safely one day, even though they’ve been missing for months.

When he finds out that his Uncle Hamish’s Loch Lochy tourist business is struggling, and it looks like Benji and Stanley might lose another home, Benji’s not worried. He has a plan. If he can show everyone that the Loch Lochy monster exists, people will flock to come and see it, and the business will flourish again.

Together with his new friend Murdy and Mr Dog, the best dog in the world, Benji sets off to capture evidence of the monster, even if he has to get a little creative. But Benji might end up confronting more monsters than he expects.

About the Author

Jenny Pearson has been awarded six mugs, one fridge magnet, one wall plaque and numerous cards for her role as Best Teacher in the World. When she is not busy being inspirational in the classroom, she would like nothing more than to relax with her two young boys, but she can’t as they view her as a human climbing frame. Her debut novel, The Super Miraculous Journey of Freddie Yates, was shortlisted for the Costa Children’s Book Award and selected as a Waterstones Book of the Month.

Twitter: https://twitter.com/J_C_Pearson

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/J_C_Pearson/

What I Thought

The Boy Who Made Monsters follows Benji and his brother Stanley up to a Scottish Loch to live with their uncle after their parents go missing. The story is told from eleven year old Benji’s perspective and as such I would say this is on the younger end of middle grade.

Benji is an entertaining narrator who despite all the upheaval in his life is willing to go all in to help his uncle’s ailing business and he takes us along for the ride with a lot of humour. I can’t help thinking that this is also a note to us all to look out for the people we think as coping well when something difficult happens. Under the surface all may not be well and their flippers may be paddling wildly.

The topic of grief is approached with sensitivity and we get to see a few different ways that individuals cope with it. The relationship between Benji and his brother Stanley was well developed, from standard sibling fights to fighting for your sibling.

Benji’s new friend Murdy McGurdy was a delight although I have to admit that I think Mr Dog was my favourite character, there is one illustration included in the book that made me want to give him the biggest boop.

There is a good mix of adventure and emotion in this story and I think it’s one that you would get even more from reading for a second time.

This is the third book by Jenny that I have read and enjoyed and she really is a master at mixing humour with the more serious experiences children may have to face.

See also my review of Freddie Yates here.

Thanks to Bee at Kaleidoscopic Tours and the publisher Usborne for the gifted copy. Opinions are all mine. Follow the tour by using the hashtag #TheBoyWhoMadeMonsters

The Thief of Farrowfell by Ravena Guron – Blog Tour Book Review

About the Book

Welcome to Farrowfell where edible magic is the hottest commodity, traded between those who can pay or – in the case of Jude Ripon, the youngest thief in Farrowfell – those who can steal it! 

Twelve-year old Jude Ripon has never been taken seriously by her family of magic-stealing masterminds. To them, she’s just the youngest, only good for keeping watch while they carry out daring heists. Desperate to prove her worth, Jude decides to steal valuable magic from the fanciest house in town…

But Jude’s stolen prize was protected by a curse. While attempting to untangle the mess she’s made, Jude discovers just how far her family will go to stay at the top of the criminal world. 

Suddenly, her quest to become a true Ripon isn’t straightforward any more…

An epic debut middle-grade series from FAB Prize winner Ravena Guron, author of UKYA, This Book Kills. 

About the Author

Ravena Guron is a British Indian biochemist turned lawyer turned YA author turned MG author, a superb new voice who brings her own captivating brand of energy, wild adventure and joy to the genre. The Thief of Farrowfell is the first in an intended series following Jude Ripon, and was shortlisted for Penguin’s WriteNow scheme, as well as being highly commended in the Faber FAB Prize. Ravena is a Londoner through and through: born, raised and educated in London, she lives there still. 

About the Illustrator

Alessia Trunfio is an illustrator who lives in Rome. After graduating with an Animation Degree from the International School of Comics in Rome, Alessia has worked as a background artist for some of the most important animation studios in Italy. 

What I Thought

The book arrived to me with its own bag of edible magic which tasted very yummy, hopefully I have got away without turning into a Lilthrum.

I’ve only managed to read the start so far – it only arrived at the weekend and then I had a health blip – so I will add my full review and reshare this post when I do. Here are my initial impressions.

The reader really gets drawn into this new world with a bang and I love that we start with a heist and immediately see the edible magic in action. What a fun magic system – although it appears not all magic is tasty. We get an immediate sense of the pressure that Jude is putting on herself to really belong to the Ripon family and we just as quickly see why she doesn’t already have that. With a sense of competition and not collaboration amongst this family of thieves. I want to do an Encanto shout out with the magic house chucking open doors and windows, I wonder how big a character it will play.

Poor Jude doesn’t manage to get the big reveal about her daring heist and captured magic, and it’s probably a good thing no one noticed if the curse turns out to be true.

Things soon start going wrong for the Ripons – is it just bad luck or cursed bad luck? Will Jude get the blame or will she manage to prove herself and find her place in her family. I like the rival relationship between her and her older sister but I can sense there is much more to that story. There’s some clever hints that things aren’t so rosy in the Ripon spotlight.

I can already tell this is going to be such an expansive world with plenty of opportunity for more adventures once this one is wrapped up. I probably won’t get to finish this until the weekend but I’m looking forward to finding out more about what Jude’s magic yo-yo can do.

Huge thanks to Bee at Kaleidoscopic Tours and the publisher Faber for the gifted copy for the purposes of an honest review. Do follow along with the tour using #ThiefOfFallowfell for more reviews and content.