Blog Tour: No Place for Monsters

Today, it’s my turn on the Blog Tour for ‘No Place for Monsters’, the perfect read for Hallowe’en (or any time really!). Deliciously sinister, it offers a perfect balance of graphic novel and traditional text as the illustrations spread across each page, through and between the text, making for an engaging read.

Used to the bustle of the city, Levi is struggling to settle in to his new home in Cowslip Grove. Whilst his older sister, Regina, younger sister, Twila and mother seem happy with the change, Levi starts his new school without having made any friends. When partnered with exuberant, wayward Kat Bombard for a school project, things change. Determined to investigate some strange goings on, the pair suddenly realise that things in Cowslip Grove are not what they seem. Children are disappearing and Twila becomes the next victim…

‘No Place for Monsters’ contains the stuff of nightmares. Scratch the surface of seemingly perfect Cowslip Grove and all manner of nastiness lurks beneath. But this story offers far more than ‘just’ a horror story: it offers plenty to think about and discuss.

Levi and Kat are an unlikely partnership. Levi is withdrawn and self contained- even his artistic mother depicts him as a turtle, ‘safe in his shell’. Kat is a wild card- given to making up elaborate stories and giving her teacher grey hair, she bursts into his life, dragging him unwillingly into her adventures. But, as often happens, these very different characters come to value each other, supporting and saving one another as their nightmare develops. Their home lives are also very different. Levi’s father has been away for a long time after arguments with his mother, yet his family are close and supportive; Kat’s background is less clear, but her impressive, perfect house is clearly far from a safe, loving home.

As the inhabitants of Cowslip Grove try to make their village perfect, the story explores the dangers of conformity and of trying to subdue the natural world. As the villagers manicure their lawns, hack their hedges into perfect cubes and seek to destroy wildlife, they fail to notice the very real dangers threatening their lives. In fact, by saturating their lawns with weedkiller and fertilizers, they are helping… but I might say too much and spoil things! The story also considers who the real ‘monsters’ might be as looks can be deceiving and help comes from some unexpected sources.

The illustrations are just incredible. Full of atmosphere and detail, they add much to the story, with pictures often working in place of sections of text as well as in harmony with them in others. Both setting and characterisation are developed through the illustrations and the use of dramatic black backgrounds on some pages adds to the sinister feel of the story as the tension mounts.

Now, I have to admit that this would not normally be the type of book that I would reach for myself. It’s definitely one I would read with a view to matching it to children, but I was very surprised by how much I enjoyed it and how much I felt it had to offer! With the right group, it could be an excellent guiding reading text. Just shows, you should never judge a book by its cover!

No Place for Monsters Kory Merritt

Chicken House ISBN: 978- 1913696085

Many thanks to Chicken House for inviting me to take part in this tour! Watch out for the other posts…

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