This review was written for the Sisters In Crime website, but the editor is overseas right now, so I thought they wouldn't mind my sharing it with you here. If you like crime fiction, there's a very good review spot on the web site. Go check it out.
"London 1878. Verity Sparks has an extraordinary talent:
she can find lost things just by thinking about them.
When she joins a Confidential Inquiry Agency, she discovers
there is a mystery lurking in her own past and that unknown forces are working
against her. It soon becomes clear that Verity and her friends are in great
danger.
Who doesn't want them to learn the truth about Verity
Sparks?"
Who indeed? There are a nice lot of red herrings in this little
mystery, even if the only mystery involved is Verity's identity. There are also
plenty of delightfully quirky characters in the family of Saddington Plush aka
SP, his sister Judith, his father the Professor, who spends his life doing
experiments, his botanical artist aunt Mrs Morcom, who keeps a couple of
pythons, Antony and Cleopatra, in the conservatory. They investigate their
cases with many a stop for tea.
I liked the references to Victorian spiritualism - this era was
a major time for seances. I also liked that when a character is hit on the head
and knocked unconscious, he doesn't recover immediately, as characters do on TV
or in much fiction, including a massive best selling novel I'm reading now. It
won't do young readers any harm to learn this.
I'd recommend it for anyone who enjoys the novels of
Sophie Masson. It has a style very reminiscent of Ms Masson's work.
This book is on the 2012 Children's Book Council of Australia
shortlist.
I was on a panel with this author at the Sisters In Crime convention earlier this year. She is a veteran children's writer.
Thanks Sue, I really enjoyed your review. I'm a secondary school teacher librarian with a big stack of books to read by my bed, this is one of them. Book Week has arrived and still I haven't read "Verity Sparks". I'm now more inspired to do so. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteHello, Deezebra. Welcome to my blog. I, too, haven't read all the books on the shortlist. Partly this is because many of them are always out.;-) but some years.it just isn't possible. This book is fun, though, so do read it.
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