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{{infoboxinfobox1
|title=Gideon the Cutpurse
|author=Linda Buckley-Archer
|buy=Yes
|borrow=Yes
|format=Paperback
|pages=384
|publisher=Simon & Schuster Childrens Books
|date=June 2007
|isbn=978-1416916574
|amazonukcover=<amazonuk>1416916571</amazonuk>|amazonusaznuk=1416916571|aznus=<amazonus>1416915257</amazonus>
}}
When Peter accompanies Kate and her father, Dr Dyer, to Dr Dyer's lab, it's simply to show Peter their party trick - how static electricity can make your hair stand right on end. But it frightens Kate's dog Molly and she bolts. As they chase after her, the lab's anti-gravity machine catapults Peter and Kate back to the eighteenth century. The anti-gravity machine is stolen by the Tar Man, a notorious criminal, and without it Peter and Kate are stranded. They are befriended by a reformed cut-purse named Gideon, but Gideon has his own feud with the Tar Man and if his past catches up with him before Peter and Kate catch up with the anti-gravity machine, they'll never be able to return home. Meanwhile, in the twenty-first century, a massive police hunt for the missing children is being hampered by secretive NASA scientists...
Children interested in time travel would enjoy Madeline L'Engle's [[A Wrinkle In Time]] and Jeanette Winterson's [[Tanglewreck]], while those who enjoy historical fiction can find another eighteenth century romp in Nicola Morgan's [[The Highwayman's Footsteps]].
 
'''Reviews of other books by Linda Buckley-Archer'''
 
[[The Tar Man]]
{{amazontext|amazon=1416916571}}
{{amazonUStext|amazon=1416915257}}
{{commenthead}}
|name=Magda
|verb=said
|comment= My two favourite novels of tweenage years were about modern (read :60's/70's) female teenagers transported into the past (19th and 18th century); in both cases as 'repalcements' of girls already there.
They were both rather girly (in an old-fashioned, meaning concerned with relationships and social mores not modern barbie way) but I loved them, probably because there is nothing like a time travel story to show how the past differs from the present, and also to allow one to relish the superiority of the present. I have a strong feeling that I became a proto-feminist after reading the one that had a champion-swimmer 14 year old from the 60's moved to 1895 or something...
 
 
 
}}
{{comment
|name=Jill
|verb=replied
|comment= Ah, this one sees the superiority of the present, but it also features a lonely boy who makes connections in the past sorely lacking in his present life. 
}}

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