
The After School Crime Club
Hayley Webster
Nosy Crow
Willow is a loner, she’s grieving for her beloved Nanna. Now she’s starting to feel a sense of isolation for no-one can fill the void left by Nanna who was a huge fan of 50s musical films especially Singing in the Rain, which is mentioned frequently throughout the story.
Then she joins an after school study group, at the local bookshop, The Book Box, and there all the other students are way more confident than she is; some are members of her year 6 class although they’ve never conversed. One is Tay Welding who intrigues Willow: she appears to be the school ‘bad girl’ but her nonchalant, I don’t care attitude rather appeals to Willow. She now begins to reflect on her social isolation and starts to feel she might just want to feel accepted and to fit in somewhere.
When some of the study group members take advantage of Willow, daring her to do things she knows in her heart are wrong, to gain membership of their club, she does so. However she keeps hearing Nanna’s voice questioning the choices she’s making and she feels increasingly conflicted.
Can she work out who her true self actually is? In so doing perhaps she can help her Mum process her own grief too.
Hayley Webster writes about the need for acceptance with sensitivity, honesty and empathy. I’ve not read any of her previous books but will certainly seek them out. This one is pitch perfect for older KS2 readers.

Sticky Pines: The Wrath of the Blob
Dashe Roberts
Future Human
This is the concluding story in the epic, action-packed, sci-fi adventure series: it’s at once wonderfully weird, funny and full of mystery, danger and risks.
Lucy Sladan races against time in an endeavour to save the world from total obliteration. Her friends, the Nagalons, are fighting to survive having been captured by Milo’s despotic father, largely because he considers them different and thus a potential threat, while Milo himself has been trapped in a huge impenetrable blob, which has been exposed following the draining of Black Hole Lake. Lucy though is an enormously brave, tenacious character who doesn’t stray from the path she believes to be the right one; she has some difficult decisions to make along the way and faces huge danger. As her friendship with Milo develops, the boy too has difficult decisions to make, for he’s conflicted between his father’s expectations of him and the feelings he has for Lucy
You will be on the edge of your seat from beginning to end of this thrilling series finale. You’ll find yourself thinking hard about some of the issues raised – particularly difference and acceptance, understanding and showing empathy – long after you’ve closed the book, but that’s what cracking writing like this should do to its readers.