Thursday, May 25, 2017

Midnight for Charlie Bone (Children of the Red King series) (Lizzie)

Jenny Nimmo's Children of the Red King series (beginning with Midnight for Charlie Bone) is one of my favorite fantasy series for younger audiences, and one of my favorites overall. The characters are adorable and the fantasy world fun and creative. Although written for grades 4-6, I enjoyed the series as an adult--I read all eight books.

Blurb: Charlie Bone lives with his mother, two grandmothers, and his uncle in London. Life is fairly normal until his tenth birthday, when he starts hearing the people in photographs talking. This doesn't surprise his family as much as it does him. He's sent off to Bloor Academy, a weekday boarding school for the gifted, for those gifted in the arts and for those gifted in other things, like hearing photographs, controlling storms, turning into birds--the sort of strange gifts that only descendants of the Red King have.

While Charlie navigates his new school, makes friends, and wonders what really happened to his father, he discovers that the descendants of the Red King have been locked into a generations-long battle between those who choose to be good and those who choose to be evil, that every family is a mix of the good and bad, and that Bloor Academy is a battleground.


Like Harry Potter, Charlie Bone is a an English boarding school fantasy, but in Charlie's world, people don't use wands and potions and they don't have a separate world to live in undetected, though they do keep their gifts a secret. Charlie and the other descendants of the mysterious Red King simply have "gifts." Unusual ones at that. Charlie can hear paintings and photos, and travel into them. Emma can become a bird. One of their friends can feel the emotions of whoever last wore whatever clothing or cloak he's currently wearing (this is terrible if the last person who wore the cloak was murdered ... but good if he was brave), another can control water, another can write with moonbeams.

Aside from the creativity of the story world and the fun, but sometimes sad, stories of friendship and adventure, the characters are very likable (or delightfully unlikable). Charlie's uncle is definitely a favorite. A tall, dark reclusive man who rarely leaves the house, because, as we soon discover, the poor man's gift is causing power surges. Every time he goes outside the streetlights explode. His character grows a lot over the series, as a need to help Charlie and to see Emma's pretty aunt force him out into the world and into courageous deeds. His romance with Emma's aunt, lasting over several books, is sweet. :)

Have you read any of the Charlie Bone books? If you read books written for a younger audience (as the writers of this blog read and write young adult books even though we aren't teenagers, except for Hannah :)), why do you?

2 comments:

  1. Great post! This looks like a really fun series. I will have to keep it in mind. . .

    I read juvenile fiction because oftentimes, teen fiction is the same. Here's a dystopian fiction novel, with characters who have to fight against the rest of the world. . . And I prefer fantasy. Children's books can be a lot more creative and fun, and there isn't usually romance. :)

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thanks! It is a fun read.

    Yes, they are creative and fun and lacking in the drama and romance of teen novels. I'm not a fan of the drama and love triangles common to teen books. :)

    ReplyDelete

Please note that your comment hasn't gone through unless you see the notice: "Your comment will be visible after approval." We apologize for any difficulties posting comments or delays in moderation.