World-Eater
By (Author) Robert Swindells
Penguin Random House Children's UK
Yearling (imprint of Random House Children's Books)
1st October 1996
United States
Children
Fiction
823.914
Paperback
160
Width 130mm, Height 195mm, Spine 9mm
117g
A nailbiting thriller from master storyteller, Robert Swindells, winner of the 1993 Carnagie Medal. 'There's something in the sky... something terrible!' On the night of the great storm, a mysterious new planet suddently appears in the sky. Orbiting the sun between Mercury and Venus, the huge blue-grey sphere has scientists baffled as probes reveal its surface to be flat and bare and its interior liquid. Eleven-year-old Orville, absorbed in witing for his favourite pigeon to hatch her first eggs, is the first to suspect the true nature of the planet. But will anyone listen to his theory And, if they do, can they avert disaster For if Orville is right, the world is doomed . . .
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. '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