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review 2014-11-23 11:27
✒ [Rezi] Lockwood & Co. - Der wispernder Schädel | Jonathan Stroud
Lockwood & Co. - Der Wispernde Schädel: Band 2 - Jonathan Stroud

 

Nach dem ersten Band geht es hier nun gespenstisch weiter. Ein paar Monate und viel Erfolg später stoßen Lockwood & Co. auf viele weitere Geistergeheimnisse, die sie lösen müssen. Es geht um Leben und Tod! Die Rätsel sind gar nicht so einfach zu lösen und verleiten immer wieder zu den unmöglichsten Vermutungen. Ein Abenteuer für große und kleine Leser mit Spannung, Humor und Können! Von diesen Agenten können wir noch eine Menge lernen... Die Erwartung auf den dritten Band ist kaum auszuhalten!
Source: buecher-welten.blogspot.de
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review 2014-10-21 20:48
The Whispering Skull
The Whispering Skull - Jonathan Stroud

Last year brought us Lockwood & Co: The Screaming Staircase, which was a 99.9% enjoyable book for me, and one that left me wanting the sequel now.

 

The sequel has now arrived and I’m happy to report that I found it as engaging and entirely readable as the first book. Lockwood, George, and Lucy find themselves going head to head with their archrivals, the Fittes Agency, and attempting to battle the ghost of a Victorian doctor and possible black magician. Plus, there is a skull in a jar whose whispers only Lucy can hear.

 

At first the different strands of the plot seem a bit disparate. There’s the Source that they have to deal with, the bet with the Fittes agents, the skull and its suggestive comments, and Lockwood’s secrets which he keeps even from George and Lucy. But by the middle of the book, Stroud pulls them together in a fairly masterful (if slightly coincidental) way.

 

For me, Lucy’s voice and the interaction between the three main characters is a large part of the appeal. Lucy is loyal, sarcastic, a bit self-centered (or at least, unable to see people entirely clearly). I had some issues with the way George was described in the first book, and while that didn’t exactly go away, I can see the dynamic becoming more complicated in ways that make me feel like Stroud may ultimately do some interesting things with the questions of heroes and so on.

 

I also noticed that, like E.K. Johnston’s Story of Owen, the narrator is a young girl who is telling a story she is involved in but which she normally wouldn’t be considered the protagonist of. In most stories of this type, Lockwood would be firmly at the center of the narrative. Instead, he remains a bit of an enigma, his charisma described by the other characters but never entirely felt. For the most part, this works for me, because Lucy herself is quite delightful and doesn’t come across as simply a storytelling device. But I did find myself a bit hung up on why Lockwood wouldn’t tell George and Lucy anything.

 

And it’s also true that, because of the way the world of this book works, there’s an interesting sense of time passing, of growing inevitably older and losing something as well as gaining it, which is fairly striking. Lockwood & Co are growing up and as they grow they will lose their powers. I wonder if this is partly what makes it specifically a middle grade book: poised at the tipping point between childhood and young adulthood, when you want the next thing but fear losing what you already have.

 

Of course, Stroud has decided to leave us with a Big Revelation which makes me wish it was next year already. However, the main strands of the narrative are nicely tied up, with a few lingering questions to tease us all along.

 

Book source: public library
Book information: 2014, Disney Hyperion; upper middle grade/younger YA

 

I read this book for the 2014 Cybils. You’ll be able to see all of my Cybils reviews by clicking here.

 

(True fact: I almost said this book was written by Jonathan Strange, not Jonathan Stroud. How surprised Strange would be!)

Source: bysinginglight.wordpress.com/2014/10/21/the-whispering-skull-by-jonathan-stroud
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url 2014-04-08 21:23
Fall 2014 Children's Sneak Previews

From Publishers' Weekly, a cheat sheet to the highlights of the Fall 2014 season in children's picture books, MG, and YA.

 

Featuring! Quest, a followup to the very lovely wordless picture book Journey, by Aaron Becker, from Candlewick Press.

illustration from Quest by Aaron Becker

 

And!

A new Very Nearly Honorable League of Pirates book!

A new Septimus Heap series!

A 50th anniversary edition of The Book of Three.

 

From Eos and Mani, illus. by Lindsey Yankey (Simply Read Books)

From Eos and Mani, illus. by Lindsey Yankey (Simply Read Books)

 

And!

  • The Isobel Journal, previously published in the UK by Hot Key Books, now gets a US edition
  • The second in the Lockwood & Co. series, by Jonathan Stroud
  • A new book from Paolo Bacigalupi
  • Love Is the Drug by the author of last year's The Summer Prince, Alaya Dawn Johnson
  • Cartwheeling in Thunderstorms by Katherine Rundell, whose Rooftoppers just won the Waterstones Children's Book Prize
  • A new book from Scott Westerfeld

 

...and like a hundred more.

 

Basically, get excited.

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review 2013-12-27 22:11
✒ [Rezi] Lockwood & Co. - Jonathan Stroud
Die Seufzende Wendeltreppe - Katharina Orgaß,Gerald Jung,Jonathan Stroud

 

 

Das Buch hat mich vollkommen beGEISTert! Nach seiner Bartimäus-Reihe startet er wieder voll durch. Diesmal mit Geistergeschichten! Für alle Jonathan Stroud Fans und Geisterjäger. Spannungs- und Gruselfaktor garantiert! Beste Lesezeit: An Halloween oder nachts :3

Source: buecher-welten.blogspot.de
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review 2013-12-03 17:58
The Screaming Staircase
The Screaming Staircase (Audio) - Jonathan Stroud

 This is a lovely, spooky read. I really enjoyed the interaction between the three main characters, although I occasionally wished that the descriptions of George had not fallen into problematic tropes. Aside from that, this is pure enjoyment. Stroud is sometimes hit or miss with me, but this is a keeper. Can’t wait for the sequels!

Source: bysinginglight.wordpress.com/2013/12/03/november-2013-reading-list/#The Screaming Staircase
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