Series: Goth Girl, Book Two
Publisher: Macmillan Children’s Books
Format: Hardback
Published: 25th September 2014
Number of Pages: 224
Book: Bought
Genre: Historical,
Steampunk, Fantasy, Mystery, Gothic, Action-Adventure, MG
Recommended
Age: 9+
Contains: Violence
Author's
Site: Riddell
Preparations
are under way for the Full-Moon Fete and the Great Ghastly-Gorm Bake Off.
Celebrity
cooks are arriving at the hall for the big event, and as usual Maltravers is
acting suspiciously. On top of all this,
Ada’s elusive lady’s maid Marlebone has a surprising secret, and everyone seems
to have forgotten Ada’s birthday!
Review:
“Ada
was exited too, but she couldn't shake the feeling that something strange was
going on; she was worried about Marylebone, and it was her birthday in two
days, which everyone had most likely forgotten again. It had put her in
rather a funny mood.”
Ghastly-Gorm Hall is extremely busy,
preparing for the Full-Moon Fete. Ada Goth's friends are soon wrapped up
in the preparations, setting up for the Great Ghastly-Gorm Bake Off and
welcoming famous chefs and artists.
But Ada is once again growing suspicious of
Maltravers and has just met her lady's maid for the first time, discovering her
long-kept secret. Ada wants to find out what on earth Maltravers is up to
and how to help her lady's maid – but how is she meant to do that without the
Attic Club's help?
Perhaps the charming and mysterious new
guest, Lord Sydney Whimsy, can help her get to the bottom of the curious
going-ons at Ghastly-Gorm Hall...
I adored the first Goth Girl book (see my review: here!), so knew I wanted to read Fete Worse Than Death as soon as humanely possible. But even
I wasn't expecting how fast 'as soon as humanely possible' turned out to be.
I read Fete Worse Than Death in
a single sitting, gobbling it up as Team GB kicked arse in the Paralympics on
the TV. I just love this series so much! I love the silly literary
and culture references, I love the bonkers characters and zany plot and most of
all I love those gorgeous gorgeous
illustrations. I wish I had little people around to read to, because this
is just the most perfect reading aloud book ever and I am just totally in
love.
Once again, may I comment on the
brilliantly odd characters in this series?
I can? Marvellous. First up: Ada. She is a brilliant lead character – kind and
quirky and unusual and brave. I also love Lucy Borgia, because she is
just such a badass – a duelling umbrella wielding badass of a governess. Lord
Stanley was an interesting character – mysterious, charming and amusing, he was
a fun character to have in the book, even if I wasn't entirely sure what he was
up to half the time... Oh and Marylebone
was so very sweet – and her book at the back was just adorable! Many of
us will see certain... parallels to a certain book about a rather well known
bear, but the literary puns and parallels just make me adore this series (and
Marylebone) even more.
The list of characters was even more
bonkers in FWtD than it was in GoaM, ranging from chefs Mary Huckleberry
and her manservant Hollyhead to Mr Tumnus a cabinet-making faun. I do
think maybe more effort went into the (admittedly hilarious) references than
into characterisation – but this is a book for children, so I forgive that.
Plus the references were so very funny that I really didn’t mind much.
Chris Riddell's writing was brilliant – easy
to understand but still wonderfully descriptive (helped, of course, by those
gorgeous illustrations – more on that later). It really is the perfect
reading out loud book – the kids will love the fun storyline and quirky
characters and the parents will love all the puns and references. It's
just so much fun to read – and so easy too. As proven by the speed with
which I read it...
Now we're onto my favourite part – those
beautiful, beautiful illustrations!
They are just so stunning and atmospheric and perfect and gorgeous and I
love them to pieces. Chris Riddell is a master with both brush and words
and I adore him and Goth Girl both!
While I didn't enjoy Fete Worse Than Death quite as much as Ghost of a Mouse, I still utterly adored it and totally recommend
it – both for parents to read to their children and for everyone else to read
too. These books are just so much fun and are so very beautiful – I'm so
in love with this series! Gimme Wuthering
Fright right now! I need it so very much!
Star Rating:
4 Out of 5
4 Out of 5
Read this
book if you liked:
The Series of Unfortunate
Events by Lemony Snicket
The Mystery of the Clockwork
Sparrow by Katherine Woodfine
Wells & Wong by Robin
Stevens
Happy Reading
Megan
I loved those gorgeous illustrations! the plot is weak and not so important. it's more an art work than a piece of literature. I don't read graphic novels and consider this book to be a graphic novel, because the illustrations are the most significant part of the story.
ReplyDeleteI believe this book to be quite entertaining for adult as well as for children.
Penelope
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