Showing posts with label Venice. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Venice. Show all posts

Friday, 11 October 2024

Hilary McKay (Author), Keith Robinson (Illustrator) - Rosa by Starlight - Book Review - Mr Ripley’s Enchanted Books


In "Rosa by Starlight," Hilary McKay weaves a captivating tale that is at once whimsical and poignant, inviting readers into a world where magic exists just beneath the surface of everyday life. This enchanting story follows Rosa, a young girl whose search for wonder leads her to an unexpected friendship with Balthazar, a large black cat who embodies the spirit of adventure and companionship. 

Rosa's journey begins against the backdrop of a dreary existence with her dreadful aunt and uncle, who threaten to dull her vibrant spirit. Yet, with Balthazar by her side, she is reminded that magic can be found in the most unexpected places, even when life feels particularly heavy.

Moving further forward the plot is set against the breathtaking canvas of Venice, McKay’s storytelling shines and shimmers as she captures the city’s enchanting beauty and rich history. The ancient canals and vibrant streets become a character in their own right, providing a stunning backdrop for Rosa’s adventures. As she navigates the complexities of her new environment, the presence of magic becomes palpable, intertwining with the themes of hope, resilience, and the transformative power of friendship. You also discover this feeling with the beautiful black-and-white illustrations from Keith Robinson. 

While the story is undeniably whimsical, it does not shy away from exploring the darker aspects of Rosa's life. Feelings of abandonment and loneliness are juxtaposed with moments of joy and discovery, creating a rich emotional tapestry that resonates deeply with readers of all ages. McKay's ability to balance light and shadow is a testament to her skill as a storyteller.

As Rosa confronts her fears in the face of adversity, readers are invited to reflect on their own journeys. The message that magic can be found even in the most difficult times is both uplifting and empowering. The bond between Rosa and Balthazar serves as a reminder of the importance of connection and the unexpected ways in which support can manifest.

"Rosa by Starlight" is not just a tale of adventure; it is a celebration of imagination and the indomitable spirit of a young girl who refuses to let her circumstances define her. Hilary McKay has crafted a story that sparkles with wonder while also gently addressing the complexities of life.  It is a book that will leave readers with a full rainbow of emotions, encouraging them to look beyond the ordinary and embrace the magic that surrounds us all. Published by Macmillan Children's Books. 



Wednesday, 8 May 2013

Book Review - Michelle Lovric - The Fate in the Box

                                               




This is the fourth book that has been written by Michelle Lovric. Every single story is a little time capsule of Venice which has been written in a place and time (1780's) that you could easily lose yourself in. Each story is a painted picture cleverly written in words. The Fate in the Box slowly winds through the streets of Venice in a colourful and vibrant way that makes it a very pleasurable read.

The venetian cries easily wash over you with charm and panache; the story ouses character from every page. There is a great sense of place and time that is quickly established and sets you on a journey of cleverly woven intrigue and mystery. The best way that I can describe this book is that of a Venetian snow globe which is gently shaken from time to time. The observer is then able to watch the wonders (through the snow) slowly begin to reveal themselves. It is enchanting!

The historical and factual partnership make a brilliant platform in which to weave a fantasy path. Both elements will have you hooked in a unique and special way. The author's knowledge and passion shines through every page like the skilled glassblowers of Murano, who are featured within the story. 

Fogfinger rules Venice - his Fog Squad and spies can be found everywhere. The Venetians fear him and obey him. He rules over with menace, ugliness and horror, so don't be surprised to read about an army of dead animals that are reanimated as automata! The inhabitants are all ruled with fear, but they remain intensely proud of their city. Every year one of their children is lost in a grisly Lambing Ceremony - the child must climb the bell tower and let the Fate in the Box (a grinning skull inside a jack-in-the-box) decide their destiny. Most end their days in the jaws of the primeval crocodile that lurks in the lagoon or at least that is what Fogfinger tells them. . . . . 

The book is full of courage, daring deeds and humour. The main characters Amneris, Tockle and Biiri aim to uncover the mysteries and seek answers..... but they may not stay alive long enough to reveal Venice's secrets and be able to defeat Fogfinger and his fate in the box. 

The book is superbly plotted with some very enchanting ideas e.g. walls that have tiny ears to listen in on anyone who criticises the evil ruler. The lazy inhabitants rely on various automata inventions which are described in particularly vivid detail and will easily capture your imagination e.g. magical talking statues, winged cats and the infamous mermaids (from the previous books) that are known as the protectors of Venice. 

There is so much going on in this story that you are never quite sure what's coming around the corner. It could be amazingly written dialogue one minute quickly followed by humour and laughs the next. With a combination of suspense, mystery, horror and mayhem this story really does have the lot. It is a truly creative and, in my opinion, a one of a kind reading experience. I'm really looking forward to the next book.......

For more on the books or the author, check out the books web site.
http://www.michellelovric.com/children/thefateinthebox.html

Thursday, 16 February 2012

Michelle Lovric - Child’s Eye View – Talina in the Tower - Blog Tour Post

                                        
There’s a story about a Victorian child who, on beholding St Mark’s miraculous basilica for the first time, asked her Mamma, ‘Can people really look at this every day, or is it just for Sundays?’

That little girl saw Venice with clearer eyes than most adults. And she had expressed her wonderment with the best and simplest kind of verbal magic – without resort to ‘poetic’ words, painfully stretched metaphor or purple prose, all of which are writing crimes Venice seems to provoke in many. This month I have started to read no less than three new novels set in Venice, and thrown all of them down the palazzo stairs after 30 pages. They were stale. They were boring. They were claggy with info-dumping. And they in no way expressed Venice as well as that Victorian child, who framed her wonder in terms of her everyday life, but in a surprising and feeling way. 

And there’s a delightful Irish tale about a little girl who also refused to succumb to metaphor: in English as We Speak it in Ireland (1910), little Kitty, running in from the dairy with her eyes starting out of her head, says to her mother, who is talking to a neighbour in the kitchen, ‘Oh, Mother, Mother, I saw a terrible thing in the cream!’

‘Ah, never mind, child,’ says the mother, suspecting the truth and anxious to hush it up. ‘It’s nothing but the grace of God.’ 

Kitty replies, ‘Oh but Mother, sure the grace of God hasn't a long tail.’

Children are natural aphorists, natural joke-mongers, fresh-tongued juxtaposers of the fantastic and the prosaic. Now that I write about Venice for children, I worry if I can be as good a writer as these possibly apocryphal Victorian children. I worry about my point of view, its angle, its authenticity, and most of all, its freshness. I throw open the same question to the readers of this blog, many of whom are also writers. 

Are we writers for children just basically overgrown children ourselves – hoarier, wrinklier, sadder and more experienced children who somehow retain the child’s fresh vision and humour, uncorrupted by bitterness? Or we perhaps retain just enough of it to recapture in our books? 

Or are we cynical, conniving craftsmen and women, no better than those marketing types who configure supermarket shelves with the sweeties and potato crisps at a child’s eye level? Do we manufacture false freshness, like candles with labels professing to create the smell of an open window in spring – in order to mask an inner mouldiness?

Recently I had a chance to wet-test my ideas on these matters. A child-reader of mine came to Venice. Since she wrote her first charming fan email, she has become my regular reader of manuscripts, and what a good eye she has!  She picks up logical disconnects and time-lapses; she is perfectly honest about where her attention lags; she puts ticks where she laughed. I know she is honest, and not too shy to tell me my mistakes, and that is a very valuable gift. She recently checked out the manuscript for my latest book, Talina in the Tower.


                                    

So when I heard she was coming to Venice, I decided that I would take her on a tour of all the places in the books of mine that she has read: The Undrowned Child and The Mourning Emporium and now Talina. I wanted to thank her for her help, but I also wanted to see how her vision of the places differed from mine. 

It was a bestially hot August day, so as a special treat, I organised the lovely Sebastiano to take us in his sleek water taxi. Cowering from the sun under parasols shaped like oriental pavilions, we visited Signor Rioba, the redoubtable talking statue, and slipped into the church of SS Giovanni e Paolo to see the tomb of Marcantonio Bragadin and its gruesome painting of his flaying by the Turks. cruised around the House of the Spirits, the home of my mermaids in The Undrowned Child, and saw the island of San Michele, where the real parents of my heroine, Teo, are buried in a secret grave. We went past the garden that once held the magnificent palazzo of my villain, Bajamonte Tiepolo. It was razed to the ground after the failure of his conspiracy to murder the Doge. We looked at the square of San Zan Degola, where the Butcher Biasio sold stew made of children he’d kidnapped. 

My young friend remembered everything from the books, and expressed no surprise whatsoever about this heat-shimmered sequence of so many things that sometimes sound too magical to be true, even as I write them. It had taken me many years of living in Venice to distil the disparate parts into a story. I had struggled to retrieve, balance, concoct, recook and combine Venice’s historical facts and their relics in a convincing appearance of easeful naturalness. Yet my young friend took it all in her stride, embracing the imagined and the real with equal enthusiasm.

That was the difference between the real child and me. She still has what I’ve lost and must work hard to recreate: a simple acceptance of the simply marvellous. 

She’s still seeing the grace of God’s long tail in the cream, and San Marco’s Basilica every day, not just Sundays.

                                           
Her new novel, Talina in the Tower, is published on February 2nd 2012, by Orion 
Children’s Books.


Talina in the Tower is set about thirty years earlier than the adventures of Teo and Renzo, the heroine and hero of The Undrowned Child and The Mourning Emporium. So the story concerns a whole new cast of characters (though two old friends will appear, in their younger days, of course). And one major character is still the same: the floating city of Venice - magical, beautiful and mysterious as ever - but now facing an enemy quite unlike any she has ever seen before.


 Web site page: http://www.michellelovric.com/


Thank you to Michelle for stopping by on her amazing blog tour and writing a fantastic post  for us today. I am sure that everyone will find it as fascinating as I did; it certainly makes you want to delve right in and read Michelle's brilliant books. 

Thank you to Louise for both arranging and organising this blog tour.

Friday, 19 November 2010

Michelle Lovric - The Mourning Emporium - Book Review

The Mourning Emporium
                                                     
Two summers ago, Venice was dying and an 11-year-old girl made her first (so she thought) visit to the city where she instantly felt she belonged. Teodora, it transpired, was the undrowned child, destined to save Venice from its long-standing enemy, Bajamonte Tiepolo, the traitor. According to a long ago prophecy, Teo and Renzo (the studious son) were the only people equipped to defeat the baddened magic that the traitor brought to the stricken city. But they couldn't kill him - and so, subdued, but bitter, he returned to his shadowy existence. Now he's back. And in need of a new army, he sets his sights on London - which is weak with mourning the death of the Queen, Victoria. Teo and Renzo find themselves on board a ship for orphans whose course seems mysteriously set for London. Once again, destiny brings them face to face with their enemy, who will stop at nothing to destroy not only London and Venice but the children at the heart of the prophecy that binds him to his failure.


This is the second book from the acclaimed debut novelist, who wrote 'The Undrowned Child', last year. The historical features and elements of Venice are clearly introduced at the beginning of this story. Every page turned pieces together yet another pictorial aspect of this great city and creates a lasting impression. In fact the more you read, the more you want to visit and explore this great wonder of a city. The historical detail, threaded throughout the story, creates a unique and rich back drop for the introduction of a number of wonderful and crazy characters.

Starting off on a roller-coaster ride of words, the author has the amazing ability to tell a story with a poetic voice. Sometimes she invents intriguing new words or accents, in order to fit the characters profile, which I really liked and found interesting.  Elements of the story are purely fantastical, with just a hint of truth to blend the story together.

The most memorable part for me included the characters Bajamonte Tiepolo and Miss Uish, who are the haunted and sinister plotters of evil - insatiable reading which had me hooked.  I only have one slight niggle about the ending. After the action-packed outcome, I felt the story went a little limp and ended up dragging its heels a bit.

This is a book to be enjoyed by lovers of great fictional writing. It has a lot going on from ghosts to talking animals and mermaids to blood-sucking leeches. Never mind the torture, battles and frolics to be found on the high sea. The author has made good use of her personal knowledge of both London and Venice to lift this adventure - infusing it with charm and character that you don't always find. This should surely tempt you to get your hands on a copy of this book.

I would love to hear your comments about this book.


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