Spotlight Magazines Spotlight Magazine for Mansfield North, June 2015 | Page 14
Spotlight Magazine
A Good Read
The Curious Incident of the Dog in the
Night-time by Mark Haddon
Wellington is dead.
He was killed with a
fork. That’s not quite so
odd though. It was a
garden fork.
Discovering the body
of his neighbour’s dog,
15 year old Christopher
is determined to find
out what happens so he decides to do
some ‘detecting’. What he discovers will
tell him so much more than just who killed
Wellington.
As a reader you see the world through
Christopher’s eyes. A world where maths
is in charge and helps to make sense of
everything. A world where seeing five
red cars in a row is a sign of a ‘super
good day.’ Christopher has Asperger’s
Syndrome: a form of high functioning
autism. This means that he doesn’t see
things the same as others do.
Facial expressions are difficult to decode
– his teacher gives him clues to help him
– and metaphors are just confusing and
don’t really help you to understand things
because you have to spend so much time
trying to work out what it means.
This highly acclaimed novel is an insight
into a world inhabited by many people, but
alien to most of the population. Haddon
also brings out the difficulties of raising a
child with Asperger’s. His widowed father
tries to be patient but struggles with the
lack of emotion from his son.
you will feel reluctant to leave him as he
takes the next steps through life, telling us,
“I can do anything.” And like many people
with Asperger’s, he just might.
Jack Stalwart: The deadly race to space:
Russia by Elizabeth Singer Hunt
Most nine year olds only
have school to worry
about. Jack’s life is a
bit more complicated
than that. He is a secret
agent.
It must run in the family
as his older brother Max
was also a secret agent:
only he has now gone
missing. Jack must
travel around the world battling some of the
most dangerous villains there are, in the
hope that he will one day find Max.
In this book (the ninth in the series) Jack
must find the space project’s chief engineer
who has gone missing on the eve of the
launch of manned mission to Mars. With
his spy gadgets, such as gripper gloves
and a mind eraser, this appears to be
straightforward, but Jack is in for a shock.
The Jack Stalwart books are aimed at
young readers aged 7+ and appear to be
a natural draw for boys of this age. Hunt
cleverly mixes fiction and non-fiction in this
series.
Each book is set in a different country and
contains factual information as part of the
story, plus ‘fact file’ pages in the book.
In many ways Christopher has a better way
of coping with life as he can shut himself
away in a world ruled by algebra, patterns,
and prime numbers.
This age is a tricky one when it comes
to reading, especially for boys, and the
fast-pace of the story, plus the non-fiction
aspect is a definite plus.
Written in the first person, Christopher’s
‘voice’ is distinctive and original. As the
novel draws towards its rewarding ending
By Willow Coby
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