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Showing posts with label museum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label museum. Show all posts

Wednesday, 2 December 2009

Review: Tales From The Wyrd Museum Trilogy by Robin Jarvis


The Woven Path: In a grimy alley in the East End of London stands the Wyrd Museum, cared for by the stranger Webster sisters -- and scene of even stranger events. Wandering through the museum, Neil Chapman, son of the new caretaker, discovers it is a sinister place crammed with secrets both dark and deadly. Forced to journey back to the past, he finds himself pitted against an ancient and terrifying evil, something which is growing stronger as it feeds on the destruction around it. Dare to enter the chilling and fantastical world of the Wyrd Museum in this first book of a compelling trilogy.

The Raven's Knot: Brought out of the past, elfin-like Edie Dorkins must now help the Websters to protect their age-old secret. For outside the museum's enchanted walls, a nightmarish army is gathering in the mystical town of Glastonbury, bent on destroying the sisters and their ancient power once and for all...

The Fatal Strand: Something has come to disturb the slumbering shadows and watchful walls of the forbidding museum and Miss Ursula Webster prepares to fight to the death with the strange new threat. Neil Chapman, caught in the unforgiving Web of Fate, is drawn into the battle, but is there really anyway he can stop the tide of time and Doom? 
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Robin Jarvis is best known for his Deptford Mice books but personally I feel that the Wyrd Museum Trilogy is by far his best work to date. To be perfectly honest, his other books have never really appealed to me that much - I'm just not a huge fan of stories that feature talking animals as the main characters. If you have read any of these other books by Mr Jarvis and feel the same as I do then don't let that put you off reading this trilogy...... they couldn't be more different. These are fantasy books that have been written to scare the pants off you!

The first book in the trilogy, The Woven Path, sets the scene perfectly. The premise is not a new one - boy and his younger brother move into a strange and exciting place (in this case a very unusual museum) as their single-parent father has a new job there. However, the story soon takes a very different direction from normal, with Neil, the main character, making a scary journey back in time to WWII London during the Blitz; a journey involving a toy possessed by the spirit of a dead airman and a battle against a fearsome ancient demon.

Whilst The Woven Path is pretty creepy, the second book in the series, The Raven's Knot, takes this to a new level. It takes quite a lot in a book to scare me, but this one left me feeling very uneasy throughout and has some genuinely terrifying scenes, featuring the spine-chilling crow dolls and the menacing Valkyrie. For me this is the best book of the trilogy - it develops the characters further, and we also begin to find out what part the Wyrd Museum and its strange owners, the Webster sisters, have to play in protecting the world from a demonic end. It also leaves us with a nail-biting cliffhanger, and I challenge you to not reach straight for the third book to find out what happens next!

The final book in the trilogy is a great end to the series, with yet another horrifying villain called Jack 'Tick-Tock' Timms. In this book we get even further character development, including the chilling descent into complete insanity of one of the Webster sisters. On top of all of this, Neil and his friends have to try to prevent the end of the world despite even the museum itself seeming to turn against them.

The pace of the narrative in all three books is excellent, and you really will not want to put them down. Neil, our hero, is very realistic, and his dialogue, actions and emotions throughout the stories are all very believable. There are also many elements of Norse mythology 'woven' throughout the story which may encourage readers to carry out further investigation into the ancient tales which these books use as a foundation. 

Just one final warning...... if you are easily scared then it is probably best not to read these books just before you go to sleep; elements of books 2 and 3 in the trilogy especially have a habit of creeping into your dreams and turning them into nightmares.  

Wednesday, 28 October 2009

Review: The Hidden World by Henry Chancellor


Tom is back at the Scatterhorn Museum, looking forward to spending some time there while his parents are away on one of their adventures. But an unexpected visitor called Pearl Smoot throws everything into disarray when she arrives with an incredible story. She says Tom's old enemy, Don Gervase Askary, has taken her father and brother - and what's more, she claims he has Tom's parents too. Together Tom and Pearl set out on a perilous journey to rescue their families - a journey that will take them in and out of time, to exotic foreign lands, and finally into the secret hidden world of Scarazand, stronghold of the terrifying Don Gervase himself....

If you have already read my musings on the first book in the Tom Scatterhorn trilogy ("The Museum's Secret") then you will be in no doubt that I was awaiting the sequel, "The Hidden World", with a large amount of excitement. I even made sure I had finished the book I was already reading so I could dive into this one as soon as it arrived on release day.

The synopsis had already created a feeling of heightened anticipation: new characters; more time travel; a new world with an exotic name; and, of course, the return of the sinister Don Gervase Askery and his creepy and increasingly psychotic daughter. I would like to be able to say that this anticipation was rewarded with a book equal to the first in the trilogy, but sadly I was left feeling slightly disappointed. Don't get me wrong - it is certainly not a poor book and I would still strongly recommend it to anyone who enjoyed the first. I just felt that there was far too much crammed into the book, which is pretty hefty anyway at 500+ pages. This may cause easily distracted readers to give up rather than persevere through what is actually an exciting storyline overall.

Henry Chancellor obviously has an incredible imagination, and the lengths he goes to to provide vidid, detailed descriptions of the book's many eccentric characters and places like Scarazand and the creatures Tom and Pearl discover there really bring the story to life, but at the same time can lead to a feeling that sometimes the narrative is moving too slowly. So much so that I personally feel that this is more suitable for boys of 12+ which is a pity as the story would definitely have appeal to boys a couple of years younger.

Without giving too much away, the ending is darker than the previous book and leaves you with the promise of even more menace and adventure to come. If Henry Chancellor can just work at making the story move at a faster pace throught the middle section then the concluding book in this trilogy will certainly be a must-read. Personally, I am really looking forward to seeing how he brings the many strands of the story together to come to a final, satisfying conclusion.

Tuesday, 27 October 2009

Review: The Museum's Secret by Henry Chancellor



I was fortunate to stumble across "The Museum's Secret", the first book in The Remarkable Adventures of Tom Scatterhorn trilogy, on its first day in the shops. I'm a sucker for good packaging, and was hooked by the synopsis on the back cover:

Welcome to the Scatterhorn Museum! But don't get too excited - it's a cold and dingy place, crammed full of tatty stuffed animals and junk. Nobody much wants to visit any more, and its days are surely numbered. But when Tom is sent to live here he soon finds there is more to this museum than meets the eye. The animals may be shabby and moth-eaten - but they possess an incredible secret. And when Tom discovers he can go right back to the time of their making, a hundred years earlier, he embarks on a journey full of unimaginable terrors... Join Tom in his breathtaking adventure in and out of time, from an Edwardian ice fair to the wastes of Mongolia, the jungles of India, and beyond....

Point one: it is set in a museum. In my opinion museums are magical places, along with art galleries and libraries, so any book that makes promises like this will immediately have me reaching for my wallet.

Point two: time travel (need I say more?)

Point three: the promise of adventure in exotic locations.

Unfortunately, there have been many times when an impulse purchase of a book, based only on the cover design and the blurb, has resulted in disappointment. However, with 100% conviction I can say I was not at all disappointed with this book. The opening chapter is a killer with the description of a river of predatory beetles enough to get any boy slavering for more.

It isn't long after this that we meet Tom who has been shipped off to stay with his Aunt and Uncle for the holidays. Yes, we've seen this before so many times, and yes the characterisation of Tom's eccentric Uncle and Aunt are fairly sterotypical, but it is the museum that is the stand-out creation of this book. If you liked the film 'Night At The Museum' then there is a good chance that you will like this book. I remember many a visit to the Warwick Museum as a child, awestruck by the fantastic, huge stuffed Warwickshire Bear just inside the entrance, always wondering what it would be like to be locked in the museum at night and whether the various animals came to life. Henry Chancellor has captured my childhood fantasy perfectly with his descriptions of magical taxidermy.

The book isn't short on adventure either. Tom finds himself whisked away through time where he meets the creator of the museum's magical stuffed animals and experiences the fantasy of an Edwardian icefair, a place brought alive by the author's vivid descriptions of the smells and sounds that Tom encounters.

Villains? They will not disappoint you either. Don Gervase Askary and his creepy, emerald-eyed daughter Lotus ooze menace whenever they appear in the narrative. I won't say any more about these two as I would hate to spoil the surprises in store.

It would appear that all the reviewers on Amazon agree with me. However, the book is not without its faults. The plot twists are a little convoluted in places, and the author's habit of whisking Tom away to places like India for only a few chapters could be a little confusing to less-focused readers. Henry Chancellor also causes the story to drag in a number of places through his excessive descriptive writing and some readers may find these passages a little boring; but please persevere as the book is rammed full of exciting moments of action and hair-raising adventure and if you are anything like me you will be left hungry for the sequel by the time you get to the final page.