What’s it like to live
with a four year old who thinks she’s a rock star? Who’s the naughtiest little sister ever? Big
sister Kate knows. A PROBLEM!
Emma Barnes has begun what
will surely be a memorable new series. Wild Thing – aka Josephine - is the worst kind of embarrassing,
attention-grabbing, self-absorbed loud-mouthed little sister that anyone could
have. Kate can just about put up with Wild Thing at home. Kate’s got used to
Wild Thing’s messiness, her monkeying-about, the trips to the hospital because
she’s pushed something up right up her Wild Thing nose, her favourite
Bite-the-Bottom Game and more.
However, when Kate
realises that Wild Thing is starting in the reception class at Kate’s school,
she knows her life will be a total nightmare.
Kate is soon dragged into the
spotlight by her dreadful little sister’s escapades, when all she wants is a quiet
school life - not the kind where Wild Thing causes mayhem at playtimes, refuses
to sit down in class, plays air-guitar and sings out rude words whenever she
feels like it! Poor Kate secretly longs to create her own identity. Who is she
is when she’s not just Wild Thing’s big sister?
Told in Kate’s first
person voice, gradually two strands of story emerge and this is what makes
the book unique. One strand, of course, is created by Wild Thing’s constant
escapades that ruin almost everything for Kate.
The other interesting
strand in WILD THING is the family situation, which partly explains why things are as they
are, and why Wild Thing is a little indulged.
We soon find out that the
girls are looked after by their dad, a charming, guitar-playing late hippy who has
given up touring to care for his two daughters. Then we notice that Gran is
often around to restore the chaotic house to some kind of calm order and remind
Dad about events in the school diary and so on, and then we find out that their
mother is dead. So the story, although softly told, is also about a bereaved
family struggling to keep “normal life” going.
For me, this second
thread is what makes WILD THING – and probably the titles yet to come – much more
than a book that gets 8 year-old children laughing because they enjoy
reading about rude words and naughtiness. And that's important.
Wild Thing is published by
Scholastic.
Review by Penny Dolan
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1 comment:
Looking forward to reading this.
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