Revenge of the Killer Worm / Terror Tower

Eleven year old Milo is looking forward to the summer holidays: it’s to be our summer of adventure, so he tells his three friends who are also going camping at Stourmouth. His interest isn’t in the upcoming StourFest: the intention is to spend time playing video games in the dilapidated arcade, eat lots of doughnuts on the wasteland of a beach and generally getting up to mischief with Danny, Nora and Grace. It’s especially important as Milo and his mum are moving very soon and life will be very different then.
Currently Milo (a brilliant story teller who has dyslexia) is obsessed with a game called Worm Attack invented in the 1990s and despite being ace at video games he’s never made it past the giant killer worm and always gets eaten up.
From the start of the holiday the children notice weird things: the town’s mayor seems to be stealing huge trays of raw chicken; then Beth the arcade owner falls off the helter skelter roof shouting ‘He’ll come for you too’ and is taken away in an ambulance. Moreover Milo insists something was chasing them in the underground tunnel they’re investigating under the adventure golf course. Surely this story about the killer worm can’t be real – or can it? Convinced that the answer is to be found in the game, Milo persuades his friends to join him on a nightmarish investigation.

This is where I’ll leave them and merely say a life-threatening situation occurs, Milo comes to accept that change is inevitable and that this holiday is one he and his friends will not easily forget. Kathryn Foxfield’s blend of monsters and mayhem, scariness and humour, with occasional pictorial frights from Robin Boyden, will keep readers around Milo’s age on the edge of their seats till the final page.

This is the sixth and final story in the Dread Wood creepy horror series and creepy it most definitely is. We start with Angelo and Gus wandering in the woods reminiscing about how they and three others formed Club Loser, when they come upon Kaya. Following an exchange of the meaty kind, she’s suddenly bitten by hundreds of little caterpillars and ends up in hospital. It turns out these are no ordinary caterpillars; they’re a sub-species of oak processionary caterpillars, so the announcement in assembly informs everyone, going on to remind them all about the meat-free month project the school has taken on.
There’s a strong possibility that the dastardly Latchitts have something to do with this alarming infestation. Then there’s the issue that caterpillars transform into something else which could be even more deadly. It’s time for Club Loser to investigate in the woods even if it means first having a Saturday detention with Mr C. who immediately has suspicions about why they are there.
Once in the woods the friends are suspicious of a masked stranger who watches them from behind a tree. Things go completely downhill when Collette disappears, the other club members are attacked by some sort of poison and end up flat on their backs in hospital; then Mr C is taken away by the police.

At this stage we’re only half way through the book but to learn how this super-scary tale ends, you’ll need to get your hands on a copy and read on, preferably while sipping a cup of Mr C’s favourite ‘hot choccie’.

Gerald Needs a Friend

Gerald Needs a Friend
Robin Boyden
Frances Lincoln Children’s Books

Guinea pig Gerald is a loner and fanatical about his routine. His entire world is his garden wherein he spends most of his days nurturing his flowers, fruit and vegetables.

Come 5 o’clock he goes indoors and has tea, reads twenty pages of his book and at 7pm he retires to bed: a risk-taker he most certainly is not.

One morning he heads off into town with his shopping bags and is surprised to discover a new stall run by two lively mice. The mice introduce themselves and for the rest of the day, after some initial hesitancy, Gerald experiences lots of fun exciting things

and thanks to Marcy and Marcel, has the time of his life until …

That night he lies awake in bed contemplating the day and next morning …

Robin Boyden’s Gerald most certainly discovered that by stepping out of the comfort zone of his hitherto fulfilling life, the world had a lot more to offer, the most important thing being friendship.

The illustrations are terrific – hugely expressive and full of amusing details to pore over. A book to share with KS1 classes (make sure you allow time to explore each spread), as well as individuals and small groups.