2024
Isla and Lac’s mum goes missing. ‘Aunty Lou’ – not really their aunty but a friend of their mother who looks after them from time to time – cannot look after them this time as she has to go to hospital for an operation. Mum had not realised this.
Isla, who is partially deaf, and wears an aid, is bullied at school and now has to act as parent to Lac, short for Lachlan, her younger brother. A look at her mum’s browsing history indicates to Isla that mum has gone to the Hebrides.
So, she Lac, her hamster Weasley and Lac’s Luke Skywalker toy set off. They manage but don’t shine at camping and fending for themselves. Jo Somerset really has got rid of the adults and left the children to have the adventure on their own. Unlike in the Enid Blyton books this isn’t fun and it isn’t even too comfortable.
The police and social workers are now looking for them.
There are some charming coincidences, just like in all the good works by Dickens, Molière and Shakespeare. The children inadvertently end up at their Granny’s home. The co-pilot in the helicopter that is looking for them is their father. Granny recognises the ring Isla has brought with her.
It’s all a slightly uncomfortable read. Was Mum negligent to go off and leave them like that? Why had Dad abandoned them?
It comes right in the end but still leaves questions.
The book is 209 pages long. It uses a blocked text and an adult serif with difficult ‘a’s and ‘g’s. Each chapter heading has a black and white picture of something to do with the chapter.
In the acknowledgments Somerset refers to her work with Greenback Primary school.
There is also a note for children about where they might get help if they are facing problems like Isla’s.
Find your copy here
No comments:
Post a Comment