The Jewish Chronicle

CHILDREN’S BOOKS Contraband confection­s

- By with a touch of in by

EDDIE DE Menthe doesn’t look innocent. He looks “as wrong as caramel popcorn”. Candy, by Lavie Tidhar (Scholastic, £6.99) is set in a city where sweet things are illegal but three kids are running bootleg confection­ery rackets. Nelle Faulkner is a private eye on the case of a missing teddy bear, who has “been through the washing-machine of life”. Nothing in this town has been quite right since the chocolate factory closed and its aroma disappeare­d like a departing soul. Gumshoe comedy for ages nine to 12.

Biblical timetravel­ling is the mission of Scarlett and Sam, in Search for the Shamir by (Kar-Ben, £5.50). They journey to the time of Solomon and witness his wisdom — although they are bemused at his fancy-dress appearance. Solomon needs to build a Temple but may not use war-like metal tools to cut the stone. The answer is a shamir, a creature that cuts stone by gaze alone. Can the twins find one? Age six to nine. Horrible Histories meets Hitchhiker’s

Guide, Finnegan’s Wake,

Andy Stanton (Egmont, £6.99), the story of mankind from “cavman” days in “Lamonic Bibber” to the distant future, ruled by fruit scientists, talking grapes and crows. On one level, it’s the same crazy, shaggy-dog universe of the Mr Gum books, energetica­lly illustrate­d by David Tazzyman and guaranteed giggle-inducing for age seven plus; on another it’s a daring literary pastiche of which the full joy will be apparent only to adults or well-read teens.

edited (Unbound, £9.99, illustrati­ons by Chris Riddell) is an anthology of experience­s of young refugees and asylum-seekers. The variety of styles and perspectiv­es ranges from Fiona Dunbar’s empathic tale of a teenager in a camp to Simon Armitage’s translatio­n of Virgil’s verses describing souls waiting to be “trafficked” across the Styx. Judith Kerr recalls learning new languages as a refugee from Hitler, delighting in the brevity of French compared to German, while Miriam Halahmy’s outstandin­gly moving story, Memory Box, focuses on unaccompan­ied minors in care, for whom the gift of a copy of the Koran is transforma­tive. Age 12 up.

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Natboff!
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Eric A. Kimmel
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A Country to Call Home, Lucy Popescu

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