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Publisher: Everything with Words

Tom has recently moved into the eerie Tall Man’s House, where he begins to hear strange voices drifting up from the cellar. One night, he overhears a desperate boy bargaining with a rat named Captain Rat, offering an unusual acorn in exchange for a leg-iron key. Though the cellar is empty when he investigates, Tom is certain the boy is really trapped in a haunting past and at the mercy of the ominous Tall Man who lurks within the house’s shadows. As Tom’s encounters with the boy grow more intense, so does the looming threat of the Tall Man, whose ghostly presence still chills the village, even two centuries later. With every journey into the past, Tom is drawn deeper into the mysteries of the Tall Man’s House. Can Tom and Captain Rat defy the forces that bind them and free the boy from the cellar before time runs out?

This is a chilling tale of time-travel mystery, and a gripping read. Recommended for readers 11+.

Cover designed by Holly Ovenden.

Who can catch a memory thief?

“Starting on All Fools Day, twelve years ago, I remember everything. EVERYTHING. That was a wet Saturday, and that was the day I was born.” 12-year-old Piaf has the ability to (and burden of) remembering everything that has happened since the day she was born. When she discovers everyone in Paris has forgotten the entire last year, 1887, including the disappearance of several gifted children, Piaf and her twin brother Luc embark on a dangerous journey that brings them to the depths of Paris’s underground twin, the Catacombs, to capture the memory thief and find the lost children.

The Tzar’s Curious Runaways is the debut children’s novel by writer and sporting journalist Robin Scott-Elliot. Set in imperial Russia in 1725, this historical fantasy adventure takes a number of familiar middle-grade themes into a less familiar setting: vulnerable characters on a journey, friendships and acceptance, perseverance in the face of peril, the bid for freedom. It makes for an exciting and tension-filled read and is likely to hold a high appeal of young readers who enjoyed The Greatest Showman film.

The story centres around Kat, a hunchback who was sold by her parents to the Tzar for his Circus of Curiosities, at the age of six. Eight years later, she finds herself hiding in the Tzar’s palace following his death, frightened for her life because she knows that the Tzar’s successor does not have the same interest in her or her fellow performers. Through a series of flashbacks dotted among the action, the reader learns of the prejudice and ridicule that Kat experienced as a dancer, and from there the scene is set: can she escape and return home to freedom?

Teaming up with fellow curiosities, a giant and a dwarf, Kat finds practical help in the Palace’s employees, including the librarian, who equips her with a special map to help her find home in Yegoshikha (hurray for librarians and the magic they can put into people’s hands!). The trio set off on a journey, relying on their wit and small pool of resources as they overcome a host of challenges: a wolf attack, prejudiced villagers, corrupt monks, perilous terrain and worsening hunger leading to increased risk-taking.

Finally, Kat finds her home, but it is not the happy ending she expects – and the reader expects – and the dramatic action continues as they make a new escape from the dangerous persecution of those she thought would finally accept her.

Scott-Elliot’s writing is flowing, with beautiful descriptions and a brilliant gripping pace. Apart from the obvious theme of adventure, there are the underlying themes of friendship, love, deeply engrained prejudice and suffering, determination, trust and hope. This book would suit Upper Key Stage 2 classes and I can imagine them begging me to read on at class storytime.

This is one of my favourite reads this year – unpredictable and unputdownable. The backdrop to The Acrobats of Agra is India at the height of unrest during the 1857 Indian Rebellion. It follows three wildly different orphans as they try to save a circus tiger and find lost family. A super way to take a critical look at early British colonial culture in India.

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