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The Extraordinary Colours of Auden Dare

Book Synopsis

I am how I’ve always been. My name is Auden Dare. I am eleven years old.

Auden Dare has an unusual perspective on life: he cannot see in colour. He’s always had this rare condition – and life is beginning to get harder for Auden. The war for water that is raging across the world is getting a little closer all the time. It hardly rains any more, anywhere. Everyone is thirsty all the time, and grubby, and exhausted. Auden has to learn to live without his father, who is away fighting, and has had to move to a new town with his mother, and start a new school, where everyone thinks he’s a weirdo. But when he meets Vivi Rookmini, a smiling girl bright with cleverness, his hopes begin to lift.

It soon becomes clear to Auden, though, that there are some strange things afoot in his new hometown. He and his mother have moved into the old cottage of his recently-dead uncle Jonah Bloom – a scientist and professor at the university. The place is in disarray – and although Auden’s mother tells him it’s because Jonah was a messy old thing, Auden knows differently. Someone else did this – someone who was looking for something of Jonah’s. Auden had heard too that Jonah was working on something that could cure Auden’s condition – could this be it?

Then Auden and Vivi make an extraordinary discovery. Hidden away under the shed at the bottom of Jonah’s garden is an engimatic and ingenious robot, who calls himself Paragon. A talking, walking, human-like robot. Apparently built by Jonah – but why? The answer to this will take Auden and Vivi on a thrilling journey of discovery as they seek to find out just what exactly Paragon is – and what link he has to Auden – and find that the truth is bigger and more wonderful than either of them could have imagined.

Our Review Panel says...

The Extraordinary Colours of Auden Dare is a gripping story set in a dystopian future where the rain has dried up. Zillah Bethell’s storytelling is wonderfully enigmatic and thrilling throughout. There is always the perfect amount of detail in the world-building to construct a fascinating and conceivable dystopian world that is only a worryingly small step away from our own, but there is also a delightful amount of intrigue to keep the reader tantalised throughout and hanging on to every word. I particularly enjoyed the use of colours as a metaphor for the unfolding character development as Auden, who to start with tends to act with an air of childish arrogance, moves away from an understanding of the world in black and white and begins to perceive things in a much more nuanced spectrum of colours. I also enjoyed the irony in the way in which it takes a friendship with Paragon, who is after all a robot, to help Auden develop compassion and a deeper interest in humanity itself…

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