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|date=April 2018
|isbn=9780141385549
|website=
|video=
|cover=Zurcher 12
|aznuk=0141385545
So what is this book? To be honest, it's hard to say, and what is most clear is that it is a very difficult book to review. It's like that famous savoury spread people either adore or loathe on their toast, and readers will be similarly divided about it. On the one hand there are dreamlike journeys, courageous exploits, the deadliest of perils and destinies revealed. People have identities hitherto undiscovered and powers they never suspected. But readers who look primarily for speed in their stories, for a sequence of tightly-packed adventures, will be disappointed. Yes, the variety of settings and the fantastical elements are all there, and so vividly depicted that the reader suffers through each successive horror with Kay, but in return the reader must accept that the very richness of language which creates the atmosphere also slows down the pace. Feelings, backgrounds and events are described in rolling, poetic language, words piled on words, and many of them will be way beyond the experience of the average nine-year-old the book claims to be written for. Obscure, too, is some of the background. What precisely are the wraiths ''plotting'' (in their sense of the term) for? How does their world relate to ours? And what has Kay and Eloise's father been doing which makes him such a threat? While the book is in many ways engrossing, many readers will feel that they're missing something, and that some vital explanation which could clear up all their questions has been missed out.
Teens who would like to read another kind of story about the hunt for a lost father will love [[She Is Not Invisible by Marcus Sedgwick]]. Firmly set in this world, it features an admirable heroine who considers her blindness to be more of a challenge (which she has every intention of meeting) than a barrier. And both teens and younger readers will enjoy the fantasy of [[The Last Wild by Piers Torday]] and its sequels [[The Dark Wild by Piers Torday|The Dark Wild]] and [[The Wild Beyond by Piers Torday|The Wild Beyond]] – Torday is a master storyteller who manages to highlight the whole issue of climate change while giving readers a rip-roaring tale of danger, disaster and, believe it or not, talking animals. Whatever you do, don't miss that dancing mouse . . . You might appreciate [[Heart of Dread: Frozen by Melissa de la Cruz and Michael Johnston]] but we had our reservations.
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