
Ella Jones vs the Sun Stealer
Lucy Edwards, illustrated by Caroline Garcia
Scholastic
This is the first in a new series written by Lucy Edwards, presenter and disability activist, in collaboration with well-known author, Katy Birchall.
Meet twelve year old Ella Jones, who like the author, is blind. Ella lost her sight two years ago and has worked extremely hard to adjust to the challenges of being differently abled. Vital to her endeavours is her guide dog Maisie; so too are best friend Finn and her elder sister Poppy, though Ella still has to cope with battles, both internal and external, which she tries her best to face patiently and kindly.
One day when visiting central London with her family and Finn,

the world is suddenly plunged into darkness, but the pitch black seems not to affect animals, it’s only humans who panic when near chaos ensues. Both of Ella’s parents head back to their places of work, Mum to the hospital and Dad to Croft Tower belonging to the inventor Everett Croft.
Ella and Finn begin to think the darkness might be connected with the legend of Celtic god of light, Lugh, who Ailynn, owner of the Mythos Library they’d visited the previous day, had spoken about. The two friends plus Poppy manage to visit Ailynn who is in the hospital and she tells Ella that she believes she’s the one meant to defeat Lugh and return light to the world. That though would mean that Ellie faces something of a dilemma because its presence is the very thing that makes her different.
However, fuelled by the knowledge that someone else believes in her, Ella and the others return to the museum and start their quest. With clues to follow and a set of rainbow hued stones to find and position in the handle of the slingshot that belonged to Lugh, this is some enormous challenge.
Empathy is key in this moving, twisting, turning fantasy with its young blind narrator. It’s rare to have a character with a vision impairment represented in a children’s novel and the manner of its telling allows we readers to get some idea of how a sightless person might experience the world, Bring on the next story.