Anne Stormont Write Enough Blog
🔗 http://annestormont.wordpress.com/2011/03/23/captivating-enchanting-entertaining-quality-writing-for-children/Children's writer from Nottingham UK Books include Magic Molly, Abigail Pink's Angel and Peggy Larkin's War
<p>FRIENDS IN HIGH PLACES<br /><br />At barely nineteen, Angelica Donovan became one of the more successful winners of the T.V. show Our Next Super Model. The world assumed she was destined for a happy, fairy tale life as ‘Angel,’ the beautiful girl who was living the dream; sadly, that wasn’t to be the case. As the years passed, she flashed her million dollar smile to all her fans and fought to stay on top in a profession where you never knew who it was safe to trust while the fashion industry took big bites out of her heart and soul. And trust was a constant challenge for Angel due to the painful childhood secret she guarded as carefully as she did her heart. As a result, she never did find her true love on earth.<br /><br />When she wakes up ‘dead’ from a heart condition a month before her thirty-fifth birthday, Angel is at first relieved to find there is no death, just a change of state, like ice to water, and then she’s scared because her biggest and most important adventure is about to begin.<br /><br />Angelica is chosen to be an angel in training as a spirit guide for three souls on earth! Her assignment is to help two women to gain the courage and confidence to find, recognize and embrace the love that had eluded Angel in life. But her biggest challenge will be to save a very special little girl from the same evil experience that had poisoned Angel’s own earthly happiness and altered the course of her life.<br /><br />Will Angel be able to heal her own shattered soul in the process? And will the three souls she is guiding be able to recognize her, not as a ghostly threat, but as one of those ‘friends in high places’ we all have; the kind who often end up earning their wings.<br /><br /> </p>
1939 and the people of London are preparing for the expected blitz. The government decrees that children should be taken from the cities and sent to live in the countryside. This process was known as The Evacuation. This story tells of the upheaval and heartache of one of those children as she is taken away from her family and sent to live with complete strangers not knowing if she will ever see her parents again.
Anne Stormont Write Enough Blog
🔗 http://annestormont.wordpress.com/2011/03/23/captivating-enchanting-entertaining-quality-writing-for-children/↗
Emma Kerry's Notebook
🔗 http://emmakerry.wordpress.com/2011/03/29/peggy-larkins-war-by-trevor-forest/↗
Marit Meredtith WHere Fact and Fiction Fuse
🔗 http://bit.ly/euP96B↗
Maureen Vincent-Northam Writer's Checklist
🔗 http://writerschecklist.blogspot.com/2011/03/tracys-hot-mail-by-t-belshaw.html↗
It's often a sign of quality in a children's book that it has equal appeal for adults. And, in the case of `Peggy Larkin's War', this is certainly true. <br /><br />Set at the beginning of World War Two, it tells the story of Peggy Larkin, a young girl who is evacuated from London to the countryside. There's the mystery of a locked room in the house that Peggy lodges in and of the reason behind the sadness of Mrs Henderson, the house's owner. There's also the sinister presence of a stranger in the woods. The story follows Peggy as she endures separation from her parents and makes a brave attempt to settle into her new life. Along the way she makes a new friend and demonstrates remarkable stoicism and resilience. <br /><br />Forest's writing is excellent and is pitched perfectly for its intended readership of upper primary school age children. He doesn't patronise and he writes with an immediacy and economy that will appeal to children. Forest never intrudes into the story, and it never feels like he's trying to educate or preach. This is child-friendly, accessible entertainment. It's all about the story. <br /><br />The only disappointing aspect for me was the book's brevity. Having set up such great characters and a setting with so many possibilities, it would have been good to have further chapters and more adventures for Peggy. <br /><br />It would also be great to see this book in paperback. At the moment it's only available for Kindle and at least as far as my own pupils are concerned primary school children don't tend to own e-book readers. It's got a cracking good cover for one thing. But more importantly than that, it would be a good book to have in school libraries and in World War Two project boxes. <br /><br />But in the mean time parents, grandparents and teachers it would be well worth purchasing Peggy's story for your Kindle's and reading this aloud to the children in your lives.