In the Nick of Time
By (Author) Robert Swindells
Penguin Random House Children's UK
Corgi Childrens
20th July 2018
20th July 2018
United Kingdom
Children
Fiction
823.914
Paperback
224
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 14mm
160g
A brilliantly atmospheric and chilling thriller from the master storyteller and multi-award-winner, Robert Swindells. Charlotte is out in the woods on her own one day when something mysterious happens - she walks along a row of stones laid like stepping stones on the forest floor . . . and finds herself in another age. She has somehow slipped back to 1955, and is now, in the same woods, on the site of a very unique school, an open-air school for sick city children. No one believes her tales of the world she's come from, her mobile doesn't work and she can't see how on earth she's going to get back. A friendship with another pupil proves the key - is Jack more than he seems
Short chapters, clear, punchy writing and clever yse of cliffhangers are the hallmarks of Swindell's writing, here used to powerful effect to create a gripping, fast-paced read -- Kate Agnew * Guardian *
Swindells helps the suspension of disbelief with a careful leavening of information about the 1950s and enough action to keep the story moving along * Books for Keeps *
Definitely not to be missed, there is much to think about in this one * The School Librarian *
Robert Swindells writes the kinds of books that are so scary you're afraid to turn the page * Daily Telegraph *
ROBERT SWINDELLS left school at fifteen to work on a local newspaper. At seventeen, he joined the RAF for three years, then trained and worked as a teacher. Now a full-time writer, he is the author of a number of bestselling titles for the Random House children's list. In 1994 he won the Carnegie Medal for STONE COLD (Hamish Hamilton), a teenage novel about a serial killer. RUBY TANYA won the Salford Children's Book Award 2005. 'Plots which grip the reader from the opening paragraph' THE SUNDAY TIMES 'Robert Swindells writes the kinds of books that are so scary you're afraid to turn the page' YOUNG TELEGRAPH