Engaging reads for children, from Books go Walkabout

Category: Chicken House Books

Vita and the Gladiator by Ally Sherrick

Vita’s nickname was ‘Little Owl’…

When high-born Vita’s father is murdered in Roman Londinium, Vita is forced to disguise herself as a slave at the gladiator’s arena.

Here she forges an unlikely bond with Brea, a native Briton gladiatrix. Together, they resolve to bring the killer to justice before Vita is discovered

Vita stood proud in her battle chariot as it thundered towards the Roman lines. She and her army of blue-faced warriors were seriously outnumbered, but she wouldn’t yield – not without a fight. She raised her spear and prepared to lead the charge . . . BANG! She started and looked up from her desk. The front door – which meant Mother and Lucius had gone at last! A flutter of excitement rippled through her. It was nearly time’.

Author Ally Sherrick has set this thrilling adventure  in Roman London at a time when Londoninium was expanding fast following the defeat of Boudicca by the Romans. The large ampitheatre would have provided a wonderful arena for games and for Vita to show her skills.

 Ally was the  winner of the Historical Association Young Quills Award in 2017. Her website has brilliant details for students and teachers. Watch a short film about inspiration for the story or find out more about the life of a gladiator.

Chicken House Books have an amazing range of titles. They also have a wealth of materials for schools to explore and  discover about the subject.

One of the best ways to start a school project is through a book. Vita and the Gladiator is an excellent way into finding out about the Romans.

Sue Martin

The Island at the End of Everything by Kiran Millwood Hargrave

This book is a delight…compassionate, hopeful and ultimately redemptive

A remarkable book following a young girl through separation, disease and loss through remarkable courage and determination to make things right. It was shortlisted for the Costa Children’ s Book Award 2017

Ami lives with her sick mother on an island where the sea is as blue as the sky. It’s all she knows and loves, but the arrival of a cruel government official, Mr Zamora, changes her world for ever. Her island is to become a leprosy colony. Ami is banished to an orphanage across the water, where she meets a girl whose name means butterflies, and together they set out to find a way home to the island at the end of everything.

This is a book full of intriguing decisions , and cunning looks into the people who have made them, without little thought of the effect on others. It brings together the need for understanding and compassion. It shows how young people can so often break through rules that are plainly wrong.

I loved reading the book , recommended to me by the librarian at Shrewsbury International School, Hong Kong, and will now find further books by Kiran Millwood Hargrave.

Published by Chicken House Books, The Island at the End of Everything is part of a great collection of books in a huge range of genres. Their list for Summer Reading 2020 looks fantastic, about to start on the next exciting read.

Sue Martin

Powered by WordPress & Theme by Anders Norén