A brand-new young-reader adventure series from Katya Balen, winner of the Yoto Carnegie Medal and Shadowers’ Choice Award 2022
Katya Balen is an award-winning author of books for children.
Her debut novel, The Space We’re In, was highly commended for the
Branford Boase Award, October, October won the Yoto Carnegie Medal
and the UKLA Book Award, and The Light in Everything was
shortlisted for the Yoto Carnegie Medal. When she’s not writing
books, Katya likes to scroll through dog-rescue websites, bake and
attempt to keep her house plants alive. She lives in London with
her partner and their dog.
Rachael Dean is a UK-based children’s book illustrator, who lives
on the coast near Liverpool. She has created illustrations for
middle-grade fiction as well as picture books, and was recently
selected to illustrate Dame Jacqueline Wilson’s new titles. Rachael
works traditionally and digitally, painting images that are vividly
rich and bold, and she enjoys gathering inspiration from beautiful
scenes of nature. In her spare time, she loves to play the piano,
cook, and spend time at her local National Trust.
Bursting with quirky characters and imaginative world-building
elements, this is the start of a delightful young fiction series.
Clem and her friends live in a friendly community, and the warmth
of that group infuses the whole story. Short chapters and fun
illustrations bring huge appeal for readers who are keen to dive in
to engaging but accessible stories - BookTrust on THE THAMES AND
TIDE CLUB: SECRET CITY
Clem and the sparring twins Ash and Zara are part of a diverse
group of mudlarkers who search the shores of the Thames for
artefacts and rubbish, and frequent the mudlarking museum, a place
of hot chocolate and mystery. Finding a strange object endangers
both London and the river, and the three have to enter a fishily
named underwater London (Codvent Garden but still Finsbury Park),
and meet a self-important snail, menacing eels and a petulant
porpoise to put things right. This is the first of a series by the
Carnegie medal-winner Balen. The fun is in the sometimes satirical
tone, the lively detail in both text and illustrations, and
unexpected phrases: “A frankly terrifying china object, shaped like
an evil kitten”; “Tower Bridge swayed like a dandelion in the wind”
- The Sunday Times Children's Book of the Week on THE THAMES AND
TIDE CLUB: SECRET CITY
Who doesn’t love a good fish pun? Or even a bad one, for that
matter. In this brilliantly briny adventure story, Clem and her
mudlarking pals are plunged into the secret world of underwater
London . . . This is Katya Balen’s first series for younger
readers, following the success of her novels for older children,
such as October, October, which won the Yoto Carnegie Medal last
year. She is clearly delighting in the daftness of gangster eels
and stroppy porpoises, but retains the sensitive style that is her
trademark.
The action bobs along with the help of black and white
illustrations and maps of this secret underwater city by Rachael
Dean. Although there is an environmental message, it is never
pushed too hard, less a dreary lecture and more a gentle
undercurrent that bubbles beneath all the magic and mudlarking.
There is much for young readers to enjoy. Dive in - The Times
Children's Book of the Week on THAMES AND TIDE CLUB: SECRET
CITY
Balen doesn’t shy away from difficult subjects and her books all
embrace weighty themes within gently suspenseful plots. In The
Thames and Tide Club, however, she’s writing for younger readers
(the recommended age is seven-plus), and the pace is notably
brisker as the story plunges us straight into a highly imagined
fantasy, much of which takes place underwater.
Balen’s writing also contains a simple poeticism: “Everything
looked very familiar. The shapes of the buildings were exactly like
the ones above water?… but the more she looked, the more she could
see signs that the city was falling apart.” There is a gentle, but
never overbearing, moral about protecting the environment; and the
combination of short, suspenseful chapters and engaging
illustrations by Rachael Dean make this a book that even less
confident readers are likely to enjoy
*The Daily Telegraph Children's Book of the Week on THAMES AND TIDE
CLUB: SECRET CITY*
Balen launches a new series for slightly younger readers with this
wildly imaginative romp set on the banks of the River Thames. . . .
Packed with piscine puns and lovely descriptions, this is a watery
wonder.
*The Daily Mail on THAMES AND TIDE CLUB: SECRET CITY*
A delightful illustrated quest story
*The Guardian*
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