Stella Lees
Philip Reeves’s Infernal Devices (Scholastic) is the third part of a quartet about cities on wheels trundling about a future Earth. It has action, irony, intertextuality and flawed characters – some with dark agendas – and displays an original and startling imagination. Number four will complete the best fantasy since Philip Pullman’s His Dark Materials trilogy. On a smaller scale, and closer to home, Runner (Penguin), by Robert Newton, brings Depression-era Richmond alive. Young Charlie is employed by Squizzy Taylor, until the boy realises he’s doing the devil’s work. Newton’s wit lightens a tough tale with the inventive and laconic speech of Australian battlers, so that, when you’re not blinking back a tear, you’re laughing aloud.
- Ruth Starke
- Pam Macintyre
- Mike Shuttleworth
- Books of the Year
- David Levithan
- Stephanie Owen Reeder
- Bob Graham
- Archive
- Paul Jennings
- Stella Lees
- Morris Gleitzman
- Barry Jonsberg
- Robert Newton
- Best Books of the Year
- Best Children's Books
- Phillip Reeves
- Colin Thompson
- Keirin Meehan
- Bill Condon
- Meg Rosoff
- Scott Westerfield
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